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Dual Captures of Colorado Rodents: Implications for Transmission of Hantaviruses
Author(s) -
Charles H. Calisher,
James E. Childs,
William P. Sweeney,
K. Max Canestorp,
Barry J. Beaty
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
emerging infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.54
H-Index - 226
eISSN - 1080-6059
pISSN - 1080-6040
DOI - 10.3201/eid0604.000406
Subject(s) - rodent , biology , transmission (telecommunications) , foraging , zoology , arvicolinae , demography , ecology , evolutionary biology , microtus , sociology , electrical engineering , engineering
We analyzed dual-capture data collected during longitudinal studies monitoring transmission and persistence of Sin Nombre virus in rodents in Colorado. Our data indicate that multiple captures (two or more rodents captured in a single trap) may not be random, as indicated by previous studies, but rather the result of underlying, species-specific social behavior or cohesiveness. In the pairs we captured, most often, rodents were of the same species, were male, and could be recaptured as pairs. Therefore, dual captures of rodents, which are unusual but not rare, tend to occur among certain species, and appear to be nonrandom, group-foraging encounters. These demographic and ecologic characteristics may have implications for the study of the transmission of hantaviruses.

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