Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia

Rodents serve as the main carriers for leptospirosis disease. Home range and habitat usage are part of the ecological study, which was less explored in disease ecology. In this study, Rattus norvegicus (RN), Rattus rattus complex (RR), and Sundamys muelleri (SM) were chosen due to their high prevale...

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Published in:MAMMAL STUDY
Main Authors: Yusof, Muhammad Afif; Mohd-Taib, Farah Shafawati; Ishak, Siti Nabilah; Md-Nor, Shukor; Md-Sah, Shahrul Anuar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MAMMALOGICAL SOC JAPAN 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001289654100002
author Yusof
Muhammad Afif; Mohd-Taib
Farah Shafawati; Ishak
Siti Nabilah; Md-Nor
Shukor; Md-Sah
Shahrul Anuar
spellingShingle Yusof
Muhammad Afif; Mohd-Taib
Farah Shafawati; Ishak
Siti Nabilah; Md-Nor
Shukor; Md-Sah
Shahrul Anuar
Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
Zoology
author_facet Yusof
Muhammad Afif; Mohd-Taib
Farah Shafawati; Ishak
Siti Nabilah; Md-Nor
Shukor; Md-Sah
Shahrul Anuar
author_sort Yusof
spelling Yusof, Muhammad Afif; Mohd-Taib, Farah Shafawati; Ishak, Siti Nabilah; Md-Nor, Shukor; Md-Sah, Shahrul Anuar
Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
MAMMAL STUDY
English
Article
Rodents serve as the main carriers for leptospirosis disease. Home range and habitat usage are part of the ecological study, which was less explored in disease ecology. In this study, Rattus norvegicus (RN), Rattus rattus complex (RR), and Sundamys muelleri (SM) were chosen due to their high prevalence with pathogenic Leptospira. Three pairs of each species were tracked from urban, semi-urban, and forested areas. The rats were fitted with a transmitter radio-collar and tracked with a portable telemetry receiver consisting of a 3-element Yagi antenna and located using standard methods of ground-based triangulation. Home range and core area were higher in the forest species (SM) than urban species (RN and RR). RN roaming and nesting areas were restricted inside houses and sewers, which is similar to RR roaming outside houses but nesting in houses. SM shows more expansive roaming areas in the forest but occasionally visits dump sites. Food resources, primarily from leftovers and dumping sites, were found to be the main factor in the viability of these species. The information on the movement ecology of rats could give accurate and valuable data on the population control, by targeting the specific areas occupied by the rats.
MAMMALOGICAL SOC JAPAN
1343-4152
1348-6160
2024
49
3
10.3106/ms2023-0044
Zoology

WOS:001289654100002
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001289654100002
title Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
title_short Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
title_full Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
title_fullStr Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
title_sort Home range and macrohabitat usage of the important rodent reservoirs of Leptospira in Selangor, Malaysia
container_title MAMMAL STUDY
language English
format Article
description Rodents serve as the main carriers for leptospirosis disease. Home range and habitat usage are part of the ecological study, which was less explored in disease ecology. In this study, Rattus norvegicus (RN), Rattus rattus complex (RR), and Sundamys muelleri (SM) were chosen due to their high prevalence with pathogenic Leptospira. Three pairs of each species were tracked from urban, semi-urban, and forested areas. The rats were fitted with a transmitter radio-collar and tracked with a portable telemetry receiver consisting of a 3-element Yagi antenna and located using standard methods of ground-based triangulation. Home range and core area were higher in the forest species (SM) than urban species (RN and RR). RN roaming and nesting areas were restricted inside houses and sewers, which is similar to RR roaming outside houses but nesting in houses. SM shows more expansive roaming areas in the forest but occasionally visits dump sites. Food resources, primarily from leftovers and dumping sites, were found to be the main factor in the viability of these species. The information on the movement ecology of rats could give accurate and valuable data on the population control, by targeting the specific areas occupied by the rats.
publisher MAMMALOGICAL SOC JAPAN
issn 1343-4152
1348-6160
publishDate 2024
container_volume 49
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.3106/ms2023-0044
topic Zoology
topic_facet Zoology
accesstype
id WOS:001289654100002
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001289654100002
record_format wos
collection Web of Science (WoS)
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