PLoS ONE (Jan 2009)

Experimental evidence for reduced rodent diversity causing increased hantavirus prevalence.

  • Gerardo Suzán,
  • Erika Marcé,
  • J Tomasz Giermakowski,
  • James N Mills,
  • Gerardo Ceballos,
  • Richard S Ostfeld,
  • Blas Armién,
  • Juan M Pascale,
  • Terry L Yates

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005461
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 5
p. e5461

Abstract

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Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases have become a major global environmental problem with important public health, economic, and political consequences. The etiologic agents of most emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic, and anthropogenic environmental changes that affect wildlife communities are increasingly implicated in disease emergence and spread. Although increased disease incidence has been correlated with biodiversity loss for several zoonoses, experimental tests in these systems are lacking. We manipulated small-mammal biodiversity by removing non-reservoir species in replicated field plots in Panama, where zoonotic hantaviruses are endemic. Both infection prevalence of hantaviruses in wild reservoir (rodent) populations and reservoir population density increased where small-mammal species diversity was reduced. Regardless of other variables that affect the prevalence of directly transmitted infections in natural communities, high biodiversity is important in reducing transmission of zoonotic pathogens among wildlife hosts. Our results have wide applications in both conservation biology and infectious disease management.