Maritime international trade and bioinvasions: A three-year long survey of small mammals in Autonomous Port of Cotonou, Benin
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Abstract
International trade has been favouring the dissemination of a wide suite of invasive
alien species. Upstream prevention through the monitoring of entry points is
identified as an appropriate strategy to achieve control of bioinvasions and their
consequences. Maritime transportation has been responsible for the introduction
worldwide of exotic rodents that are major pests for crops and food stocks as well as
reservoirs of many zoonotic pathogens. In order to limit further dissemination, the
International Health Regulation constrains decisions makers and socio-economic
stakeholders to manage ship-mediated
import/export of rodents within seaports.
Unfortunately, eco-evolutionary
insights into rodent introduction events that
could guide preventive actions in seaports are very scarce. In order to bridge this
gap, we here describe the results of a 3 year-long
survey of small mammals conducted
in the Port of Cotonou, Benin.
Our aim was to assess the spatiotemporal distribution, diversity and relative
abundance of invasive and native rodents.
960 small mammal individuals were captured in nine within-seaport
sites. We
found (i) a marked predominance of invasive species (84% of the individuals belonging
to Mus musculus, Rattus rattus, R. norvegicus), (ii) with native species (i.e.
Mastomys natalensis and the shrew Crocidura olivieri) essentially restricted to peripheral non-industrial
areas, as well as (iii) a fine-scale
spatial segregation stable
over time between the invasive Norway rats and house mice on the one hand,
and the black rats and shrews on the other hand.
Furthermore, trapping before and after two successive rodent control campaigns
indicates that they were ineffective and that subsequent rodent recolonisation
occurred 6–12 months following intervention.
Synthesis and applications. Our results are discussed in terms of ecological processes
at play (e.g. interspecific interactions) and operational recommendations
(e.g. assessment of proper eradication units, environmental modifications).
