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A comparative assessment of track plates to quantify fine scale variations in the relative abundance of Norway rats in urban slums
Authors:Kathryn?P.?Hacker,Amanda?Minter,Mike?Begon,Peter?J.?Diggle,Soledad?Serrano,Mitermayer?G.?Reis,James?E.?Childs,Albert?I.?Ko,Federico?Costa
Affiliation:1.Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases,Yale School of Public Health,New Haven,USA;2.Institute of Integrative Biology,University of Liverpool,Liverpool,UK;3.Instituto de Biologia,Universidade Federal da Bahia, UFBA,Salvador,Brasil;4.Centro de Pesquisas Gon?alo Moniz, Funda??o Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde,Salvador,Brasil;5.Instituto de Saúde Coletiva,Universidade Federal da Bahia, UFBA,Salvador,Brasil
Abstract:
Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) living in urban environments are a critical public health and economic problem, particularly in urban slums where residents are at a higher risk for rat borne diseases, yet convenient methods to quantitatively assess population sizes are lacking. We evaluated track plates as a method to determine rat distribution and relative abundance in a complex urban slum environment by correlating the presence and intensity of rat-specific marks on track plates with findings from rat infestation surveys and trapping of rats to population exhaustion. To integrate the zero-inflated track plate data we developed a two-component mixture model with one binary and one censored continuous component. Track plate mark-intensity was highly correlated with signs of rodent infestation (all coefficients between 0.61 and 0.79 and all p-values?
Keywords:
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