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1.
Bull Soc Pathol Exot ; 110(3): 165-179, 2017 Aug.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28478544

ABSTRACT

Leptospirosis is a cosmopolitan zoonosis caused by bacteria of the genus Leptospira. Whether the distribution is worldwide, the hot and humid climate of the tropics is particularly conducive to its expansion. In most French overseas departments and territories, leptospirosis is considered as a public health problem. In French Guiana, a French department located in the northeastern part of the Amazon rainforest, it is supposed to be rare. The objective of this review was to make an inventory of the knowledge on human and animal leptospirosis in French Guiana and neighboring countries. A comprehensive search was conducted through the indexed and informal medical literature in English, French, Spanish and Portuguese. Thus, respectively ten and four publications were identified on human and animal leptospirosis in French Guiana, published between 1940 and 1995 in the form of case reports or case series. The publications concerning this disease in the other countries of the Guiana Shield, eastern Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and Brazilian state of Amapá, also scarce or nonexistent. However recent data from the French National Centre of leptospirosis showed a recent and sudden increase in the number of cases in the department, probably partly due to the development of diagnostic tools such as Elisa IgM serology. It is likely that leptospirosis is a neglected disease in the region, due to the lack of diagnostic tools readily available, the lack of knowledge of the local clinicians on this disease and the existence of many other pathogens with similar clinical presentation such as malaria, arboviruses and Q fever and Amazonian toxoplasmosis. The establishment of more large-scale studies on animal and human leptospirosis is necessary and urgent to know the true burden of this disease in our region.


Subject(s)
Leptospirosis/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , French Guiana/epidemiology , Guyana/epidemiology , Humans , Latin America/epidemiology , Malaria/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/epidemiology , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/virology , Toxoplasmosis/epidemiology , Young Adult , Zoonoses/epidemiology
2.
Am J Primatol ; 55(4): 203-21, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11748693

ABSTRACT

White-faced sakis (Pithecia pithecia) are among the least studied neotropical primates. The combination of shy and quiet behavior, their ability to move silently, and the extreme difficulty of capturing them may explain why very few field studies have been undertaken in undisturbed habitats. During the course of a wildlife rescue in French Guiana, six individuals were captured and translocated to a safe area of primary rainforest. In this area, based on the observation of 35 groups, the average group size was 2.3 animals (SD = 1.2) and a density of 0.28 group/km(2) (0.64 individuals/km(2)) was estimated from transect censuses. Our study focused successively on three radio-collared animals (two males and one female) over a 287-day period, starting from release to the loss of the animal. From the study start, the triangulation method was used prior to habitutation to human presence, followed thereafter by 1,327 hr of visual monitoring. The translocated animals settled down, and two of them had a stable and compact home range. Two of them merged in association with members of the resident population. A resident group had a much larger home range than previously reported: 148 and 287 ha, using grid cells and 100% minimum convex polygon techniques, respectively. A group composed of two translocated individuals (one male and one female) had a home range of 68 and 135 ha using the same techniques. Additionally, two solitary animals used 152 and 162 1-ha quadrats. We observed animals (translocated and residents) moving quickly in one direction up to 11.5 km. The mean daily path length of resident animals was 1,880 m. Sakis used the lower strata of the forest more when in group, and the intermediate strata more when solitary. Allogrooming is fairly common in social groups. On average, the activity period ranged from 7:17 to 15:59 hr.


Subject(s)
Cebidae/psychology , Homing Behavior , Movement , Social Behavior , Animals , Animals, Wild , Behavior, Animal , Female , Male , Population Dynamics , Trees
3.
Behav Processes ; 28(1-2): 111-22, 1992 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24924795

ABSTRACT

The tendencies of different age and sex classes to flock with each other were analysed in a Pyrenean chamois (Rupicapra pyrenaica) population of southern France, on the basis of the distribution of groups into various types and sizes. The strongest inter-attraction is undoubtedly that existing between adult females and kids, even if each age and sex class also associates easily with itself. Yearlings globally seem to have lower affinities with adults of both sexes than with their own class, but, in any case, the lowest inter-attraction is between adult females and males. These social affinities, varying in detail, actually remain roughly the same through the seasons. However, the most important point is that they seem sufficient to explain the main characteristics of the social structure of the studied Pyrenean chamois population in open habitat; it does not seem necessary to hypothesize complicated individual 'choices' or 'preferences' to explain it. This allows for a systemic approach of such a population, considering individuals as simple elements, which permits us to understand the basis of sociality and to explain inter-populational differences.

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