Review
Understanding the Persistence of Plague Foci in
Madagascar
Voahangy Andrianaivoarimanana1,2, Katharina Kreppel3, Nohal Elissa4, Jean-Marc Duplantier5,
Elisabeth Carniel6, Minoarisoa Rajerison1, Ronan Jambou2*
1 Unité Peste, Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, Antananarivo, Madagascar, 2 Unité d’Immunologie, Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, Antananarivo, Madagascar,
3 Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom, 4 Unité d’Entomologie, Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, Antananarivo,
Madagascar, 5 IRD, CBGP (Inra/Ird/Cirad/MontpellierSupAgro), Montpellier, France, 6 Unité de Recherche Yersinia, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
undertaken in Madagascar from earlier works to recent findings,
including dissertations and unpublished reports from the Ministry
of Health and Institut Pasteur de Madagascar (which hosts the
plague Malagasy reference center), with particular emphasis on
plague dynamic. Altogether, documents cover almost 50 years of
plague studies in Madagascar.
Abstract: Plague, a zoonosis caused by Yersinia pestis, is
still found in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Madagascar
reports almost one third of the cases worldwide. Y. pestis
can be encountered in three very different types of foci:
urban, rural, and sylvatic. Flea vector and wild rodent host
population dynamics are tightly correlated with modulation of climatic conditions, an association that could be
crucial for both the maintenance of foci and human
plague epidemics. The black rat Rattus rattus, the main
host of Y. pestis in Madagascar, is found to exhibit high
resistance to plague in endemic areas, opposing the
concept of high mortality rates among rats exposed to the
infection. Also, endemic fleas could play an essential role
in maintenance of the foci. This review discusses recent
advances in the understanding of the role of these factors
as well as human behavior in the persistence of plague in
Madagascar.
Brief Overview of Plague Epidemiology
Within the Enterobacteriaceae family, the genus Yersinia includes
three human pathogenic species: Yersinia enterocolitica, Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis, and Y. pestis, the causative agent of plague [1].
Although, Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis differs radically in their
virulence and transmission route, they share a high genetic
homology. Y. pestis diverged from Y. pseudotuberculosis within the last
20,000 years [4].
Twenty-five hundred species and subspecies of Siphonaptera
are described but only 80 of these are known to be susceptible to Y.
pestis [5], among which the genus Xenopsylla (especially Xenopsylla
cheopis) plays a major role in pandemics. Fleas of this genus are
found in all domestic and peridomestic settings where humans are
at risk of infection with Y. pestis due to its high vector efficiency and
broad host preference [6]. In sub-Saharan regions and in rural
areas of Brazil and India, Xenopsylla brasiliensis is the predominant
vector for plague [6]. Other species, like Xenopsylla astia (Indonesia,
Southeast Asia) and Xenopsylla vexabilis (Pacific Islands) are also
important vectors [7]. The flea specificity to rodent hosts varies
from one specific host to a broad affinity: in the northern United
States, Oropsylla hirsuta parasitizes a species of prairie dogs, Cynomys
ludovicianus [6], while in Zimbabwe, the four major rodent species
Gerbilliscus leucogaster, Rattus rattus, Rhabdomys pumilio, and Mastomys
natalensis are all hosts of X. brasiliensis [8].
The high vector efficiency of X. cheopis is reported to be related
to its ability to get ‘‘blocked,’’ which increases the transmission
potential of Y. pestis. The bacterium produces biofilm required for
proventricular blocking [5] of the flea leading to an increased
Introduction
Plague is a flea-borne fatal zoonosis caused by the bacillus
Yersinia pestis. Primarily a disease of rodents and fleas, it has been
responsible for three pandemics resulting in millions of deaths [1].
Despite advances in its control and understanding, plague is far
from eradicated [2]. Due to its wildlife reservoirs, plague is still
endemic in Asia, the Americas, and Africa. It is also reemerging in
countries where the disease was thought to have disappeared [2,3].
Civil wars, urbanization, deforestation, and mining may also have
an impact on the disease.
Worldwide, bubonic plague is the predominant form and is
acquired after a fleabite. The bacteria multiply at the site of
inoculation and disseminate via the lymphatic system to the lymph
nodes. After two to six days, a painful swelling lymph node appears
(the bubo), along with high fever, headache, dizziness, and
prostration. Without treatment, the infection rapidly disseminates
to reach the spleen, liver, and sometimes the lungs, causing a fatal
septicaemia. Without treatment, lethality occurs in 40–70% of the
patients. Pneumonic plague is rare but even deadlier. It may arise
from a bubonic form, by haematogenous spread to the lungs, or
from inhalation of aerosols during human-to-human transmission.
After one to three days of latency, the onset is sudden and always
fatal without early efficient treatment. Here, we review different
factors that may explain how the disease is able and continue to
persist in Madagascar.
Citation: Andrianaivoarimanana V, Kreppel K, Elissa N, Duplantier J-M, Carniel E,
et al. (2013) Understanding the Persistence of Plague Foci in Madagascar. PLoS
Negl Trop Dis 7(11): e2382. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002382
Editor: Craig R. Roy, Yale University School of Medicine, United States of America
Published November 7, 2013
Copyright: ß 2013 Andrianaivoarimanana et al. This is an open-access article
distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which
permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided
the original author and source are credited.
Funding: The authors have indicated that no funding was received for this work.
Methods
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests
exist.
The review of the literature was conducted using the online
databases PubMed and HINARI. A thorough search was then
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* E-mail:
[email protected]
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Madagascar with one strain resistant to eight different antibiotics,
including those used for plague prophylaxis and therapy [23].
Thirteen genera of Siphonaptera (four of them endemic) were
described in Madagascar [24]; of those, two are involved in plague
transmission: Xenopsylla and Synopsyllus. The main vector is X.
cheopis, which parasitizes black rats living inside houses (Figure 2).
The endemic genus Synopsyllus is composed of five species, among
which S. fonquerniei is the most prevalent (Figure 2). It can be found
in the fur or burrows of black rats living outside houses but also in
open biotopes (rice fields, savannas) and in forests. This species is
involved in the plague cycle above 800 metres of altitude and
shows greater transmission efficiency than X. cheopis [25]. It also
parasitizes endemic hedgehogs, rodents, and occasionally a species
of lemur and insectivores.
Yet R. rattus remains the main plague reservoir host in
Madagascar (Figure 2). Its arrival is closely linked to the history
of the colonization of the island by humans [26]. The black rat is
the dominant rodent species and is found everywhere: in houses,
villages, fields, and also in the forests [19,26]. Its populations can
expand rapidly as it can breed inside houses all year round with an
average gestation period of only 21 days and a mean litter size of
5.4 (in Madagascar). Conversely, R. norvegicus is limited to large
towns since the 1950s, but is currently spreading on the western
side of the island.
biting rate and regurgitation of bacteria into the wound. Partial
biofilm blockage is sufficient to assure transmission, as for Oropsylla
montana (Baker) in the United States [9].
Around 200 species of rodents and lagomorphs have been
connected to the epidemiology of plague so far [6], but only few
are considered significant hosts [10]. Frequency of contact
between human and host varies depending on the species. R.
rattus is a tree dwelling species nesting often in the roof of huts,
whereas Rattus norvegicus is a ground dweller, preferably living in
sewer networks of large towns. Rattus spp. are the major reservoir
of plague in parts of Asia and Africa, especially in Madagascar
[3,11,12]. Its population dynamics determine plague dynamics
[13,14]. Other rodents are locally involved in plague epidemiology
such as the great gerbil (Rhombomys opimus) in Kazakhstan or the
black-tailed prairie dog (C. ludovicianus) and the ground squirrel
(Spermophilus beecheyi) in the United States [10].
Environmental conditions modulate seasonal transmission and
global distribution of plague [15,16]. In Asia and the United
States, epidemics occur at the end of winter when rodents leave
their burrows after hibernation. In other foci, seasonality in the
abundance of rodents is less obvious and flea dynamics seem more
important to take into account. Fleas, especially immature stages,
developing in host burrows are sensitive to air temperature and
humidity [17] and thus are affected by soil moisture in rodent
burrows. Larvae are susceptible to desiccation [15], and their
survival varies inversely with air dryness. Hot and dry days also
reduce blockage in fleas [17], and low temperatures delay bacterial
proliferation and early-phase transmission by X. cheopis [18].
Main Factors Impacting the Epidemiology of
Plague in Madagascar
Rural versus Urban Foci
Plague in Madagascar
In Madagascar, plague is predominantly a rural disease [21]
related to agricultural activities. In the highlands, there is a hot
and rainy season from October to April, followed by a cold and
dry season. Harvesting occurs from February to June in dryfarming areas and in May in rice fields (in some places a second
rice harvesting may occur in December). Maximum abundance of
rodents in the fields is observed in July and August, followed by the
maximum abundance of fleas from September to November (see
[7] for more details). Villages provide three distinct habitats:
houses located on top of hills, sisal hedges around livestock
enclosures, and irrigated rice fields in lower areas (Figure 3A).
Habitat choice and population dynamics of rodents are mainly
driven by the availability of resources [14]. High plague
transmission to humans has been associated with low abundance
of rats and an increase in flea vectors [20]. This low number of rats
is due to food shortages and an interruption of reproduction of
outside rat populations during the cold season [26]. Conversely
during rice harvest, an increase in reproductive rate and migration
from houses to sisal hedges [14] are associated with low plague
transmission to humans (Table 1). These factors are impacted by
climate mediated by the availability of food and shelter.
Urban plague was mainly described in Mahajanga and
Antananarivo (Figure 3B). The seaport of Mahajanga first
experienced plague in 1902. A few human cases were reported
between 1907 and 1928, but the town was free from plague for the
next 60 years. A new outbreak occurred in 1991, followed by
subsequent epidemics from 1995 to 1998 during which 1,702
suspected cases were reported [27]. In the capital Antananarivo,
outbreaks of human plague were first recorded in 1921 [19]. After
58 years of silence, the disease reemerged in the city in 1979 with
sporadic cases. Rodent surveillance initiated in the 1990s
documented the replacement of R. rattus by R. norvegicus in the
town (Table 1), favored by the construction of modern houses and
sewage networks [3]. These changes were associated with a
decrease in contact between humans and rat fleas due to the
Plague in Madagascar: A Long History
Plague arrived in the port city of Toamasina with steamboats
from India in 1898 [19]. It then spread to other harbors and
reached the central highlands in 1921 following the construction of
the railways. It invaded the central highlands while disappearing
progressively from the coasts.
From 1957 to 2001, a total of 20,900 suspected human cases
were declared with an increase in the number of districts affected.
Fortunately, over the years the case fatality rate decreased from
55.7% to 20.9% [20]. Still in 2004, 1,214 cases and 98 deaths were
reported, but since then the incidence of human plague cases has
declined continuously. However, Madagascar still accounted for
30% of human cases worldwide from 2004 to 2009 [21].
Nowadays plague is endemic in rural areas of the central
highlands above 800 metres of altitude. The northern plague focus
is located around the Tsaratanana Mountains (Figure 1). Additionally, plague has emerged more in the north at Ambilobe in
2011 (unpublished data) between the northern foci and Antsiranana.
From 2007 to 2011, bubonic plague accounted for 86.6% of
suspected cases while pneumonic and undocumented cases
accounted for 9.4% and 4%, respectively. The case fatality rate
was 13% for suspected cases and 18.6% for confirmed cases.
Reports of pneumonic plague cases were limited to the highlands
and most often evolved from bubonic plague.
The Bacterium-Reservoir-Flea Triad in Madagascar
In Madagascar, all Y. pestis strains belong to the biovar
Orientalis, which spread all over the world during the third
pandemic. Isolates can be subdivided into four ribotypes (B, Q, R,
and T), of which the most common is B, the original invading
strain, while the three others are specific to Madagascar [22].
Antibiotic-resistant Y. pestis strains were also first isolated in
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Figure 1. Madagascar plague mapping from 2007 to 2011. Dashed line: limits of the main plague foci (central and northern foci). Green area:
districts that have notified plague cases. Most plague cases were reported from the district of Tsiroanomandidy during this period. (Sources: OCHA,
Institut Pasteur de Madagascar).
doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002382.g001
end of the dry and cold season suggesting its role in initiating
human plague epidemics [20]. This finding is supported by
laboratory experiments suggesting that the development rate of
flea larvae increases with temperatures below 30uC, and decreases
above it. Furthermore, high temperatures with low humidity or
temperatures below 9.3uC decrease the survival of the immature
stages of S. fonquerniei [29]. In contrast, X. cheopis, which is mostly
found on rats caught indoors, remains at relatively high
abundance throughout the rainy season.
behavior of R. norvegicus [3]. Additionally, a lower susceptibility of
R. norvegicus to plague also limited the risk of fleas leaving dead
rodents in search of a new host, thus reducing human plague cases
in Antananarivo [28].
The Role of Endemic Fleas and Climate on Plague
Epidemiology in Madagascar
Outside temperature may strongly affect flea abundance, thus
affecting spatial and temporal distribution of the disease [29]. In
Antananarivo and the surrounding highlands, plague cases are
mostly reported during the warm rainy season from October to
April. Conversely in Mahajanga, outbreaks of human plague
occurred during the dry and cool season (from July to November).
However, despite distinct plague seasons, the lowest temperature
recorded in these two places during transmission is between 17u
and 22uC [27], which can impact flea development. In the
highlands, S. fonquerniei is exclusively found on rats caught outdoors
and shows a clear seasonal cycle, thriving in the middle and at the
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Rats’ Susceptibility to Plague in the Highlands of
Madagascar
The susceptibility of rats to plague is undeniable. However,
resistant R. rattus and R. norvegicus were reported in Antananarivo,
which could explain the absence of epizootics and the maintenance of plague in the city [28]. Furthermore, whereas all rats in
plague-free areas are sensitive to the disease, populations in
plague-endemic areas are composed of sensitive and very resistant
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Madagascar. Two loci were associated with plague infection
outcome in experimentally challenged rats [38].
Diversity of Reservoir Species
Although much less frequent and documented, sylvatic plague
(Figure 3C) occurs in Malagasy primary forests where invasive R.
rattus and endemic small mammals coexist and can sustain
transmission through endemic fleas [25]. Human cases were
reported among hunters and charcoal burners in these areas [3].
Both susceptible rodents and highly resistant insectivores live in
these forests. Several endemic sylvatic small mammals such as
shrews (Oryzorictinae subfamily) and tenrecs (Tenrecinae subfamily) were found infected by Y. pestis in sylvatic foci. They carry
nonconventional vectors like Paractenopsyllus spp., Tsaractenus sp.,
and Synopsyllus estradei (unpublished data.). This mix of susceptible
and resistant competent host species and potent vectors offers an
explanation for epizootics and human plague cases. Deforestation
also plays a major role in the dissemination of sylvatic plague to
humans as seen in the Ikongo district after the introduction of R.
rattus into this biotope. Endemic insectivores and hedgehogs in the
forest were found seropositive in anti-F1 antibodies and substantiated an intense circulation of plague in this locality [39].
In the urban setting of Mahajanga, the Asian shrew, Suncus
murinus, is most likely involved in plague transmission (Table 1).
The abundance of X. cheopis on these shrews before the onset of
human plague [3], the isolation of Y. pestis strains from their
spleens [27], and their high seroprevalence after an epidemic
period strongly suggests their involvement in the plague cycle.
However, this hypothesis is questioned by the observation that Y.
pestis strains isolated from S. murinus had different pulsotypes from
those isolated from humans, rats, and fleas during the same
outbreak [3].
Plague Persistence in the Soil
Figure 2. Main vectors and rodent reservoirs in Madagascar.
Fleas involved in plague transmission in Madagascar: Synopsyllus
fonquerniei female (1) and Synopsyllus fonquerniei male (3) are found
on outdoor rats, whereas Xenopsylla cheopis female (2) and Xenopsylla
cheopis male (4) live on indoor rats. Rat species involved in plague
transmission in Madagascar: Rattus rattus (5) and Rattus norvegicus (6).
doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002382.g002
During inter-epizootic periods, Y. pestis cannot be recovered
from fleas, rodents, or any other host. Persistence of the bacteria in
the soil was speculated in Iran and Madagascar [19,40,41]. Naive
rodents may thus become infected by burrowing in contaminated
soil (either via inhalation or ingestion), restarting a new cycle.
Although the exact mechanism remains unclear, previous studies
have demonstrated the survival of Y. pestis in soil for at least 24
days under natural conditions [42]. This was previously highlighted in 1963 by inoculation of guinea pigs with soil samples collected
from burrows, containing remains of Meriones vinogradovi that had
been dead from plague for 7–11 months [40]. This mode of
persistence could explain inter-epizootic periods. However, the
virulence of Y. pestis experimentally kept for one month in soil
decreased considerably [19], and it was subsequently demonstrated that dry laterite highly inactivate Y. pestis [19]. Moreover,
although Y. pestis may remain viable and virulent in soil, recent
studies suggested that the transmission route by exposure of
susceptible mice to Y. pestis–contaminated soil seems unlikely
under natural conditions. Indeed, the infectious period was shortlived and the transmission efficiency is low [43].
rats [28,30]. The same was previously described for R. pumilio and
M. natalensis in South Africa [31]. Yet the immune response to
infection may differ even for the same species of rat within the
same endemic area [32]. Dispersion of resistant rats with their fleas
could support plague dissemination [14]. Ecology seems to support
selection for resistance to plague as shown by genetic structure
analysis of R. rattus populations in plague foci [33]. In Mandoto
(peneplain area) no difference was found [33], whereas in Betafo
(mountainous area) genetic differences were observed between rats
from rice field populations compared to those from houses and
sisal hedges [34]. This resistance seems to be passed on to offspring
as also suggested for M. natalensis [31]. A 32-base pair deletion in
the chemokine receptor 5 gene (CCR5) used by HIV-1 to enter
cells has been proposed to confer resistance to HIV, smallpox, and
plague infections [35]. Although experimental challenges with Y.
pestis in normal and CCR5-D32 mice did not ascertain a protective
role [35,36], a unique substitution (H184R) in a region of the
CCR5 gene was found to be more prevalent in resistant animals
compared to susceptible ones and is more common in rats from
plague foci than from plague-free areas [37]. Other genetic
markers were investigated using an AFLP genome scan approach.
Twenty-two loci have been identified that may be involved in the
resistant phenotype of R. rattus found in the central highlands of
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Human Behavior and Plague
Migration, poverty, and cultural practices can all have an
impact on the incidence of human plague in Madagascar. A recent
detailed SNP and MLVA analysis of Y. pestis strains evidenced
multiple transfers of Y. pestis isolates between the highlands and
Mahajanga harbor [44]. These transfers were most likely humanmediated, by transportation of goods containing infected rats or
fleas by trucks or cars. In remote villages, people often prefer
visiting traditional healers instead of health centers, thus delaying
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Figure 3. Plague transmission cycle. A) Plague cycle in the rural area of Madagascar. Rural plague foci of the highlands are organized into three
habitats: houses (arrow), sisal hedges (arrowhead), and rice fields (star). The black rat, R. rattus (3), is the main rodent involved in transmission
associated with X. cheopis (1) and the endemic flea S. fonquerniei (2). (Photo of plague foci: S. Rahelinirina). B) Plague cycle in the urban areas of
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Madagascar. Urban plague occurs mainly in the cities of Antananarivo (Isotry Market, left) (7) and Mahajanga (Abattoir suburb, right) (6). R. norvegicus
(4) and X. cheopis (1) are involved in each focus. The Asian shrew (S. murinus) (5) has long been suspected to play a major role in the epidemiological
cycle of plague in Mahajanga. C) Plague cycle in the forest area. A sylvatic transmission occurs in Madagascar with R. rattus (3) and endemic
micromammals (such as Setifer setosus) (8) as reservoirs. S. fonquerniei (2) is the major vector of the disease in this area. The role of other endemic fleas
(9) is not yet determined. (Photo of forest of Ampahitra: S. Telfer; Setifer setosus: V. Soarimalala).
doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002382.g003
Laboratory for Plague (CLP) of the Ministry of Health and the
Plague Unit of the Institut Pasteur of Madagascar, which are the
only facilities able to confirm plague in the country. Human
surveillance is based on compulsory notification by health
centers and on the biological confirmation of all suspected cases
by the CLP. Y. pestis resistance to antibiotics currently used in
plague treatment is also registered. The responsibility of health
centers is the early detection of cases using the rapid diagnostic
test at the patient’s bedside to implement i) an appropriate
treatment (streptomycin relayed by sulfonamide) for all suspected cases, ii) chemoprophylaxis (sulfonamide) for the contact
population, and iii) the control of fleas [7]. The community is
involved in passive surveillance of plague epizootics and rodent
density.
the implementation of an effective antibiotic treatment. Funeral
ceremonies also favor the rapid spread of pneumonic plague
[7,20]. Indeed, a practice specific to Madagascar is to bury people
in family burial vaults and to perform ritual corpse exhumations
from time to time (Famadihana). Onsets of plague cases during
these ceremonies have been observed, suggesting that handling of
potentially plague-infected corpses may reactivate the disease. The
Ministry of Health therefore recommended respecting a sevenyear period between death and exhumation of a plague victim,
and before any transfer of a corpse from one village to another.
However, no study has been performed to determine the survival
time of Y. pestis in corpses.
Poverty associated with overcrowded dwellings is another factor
favoring rapid transmission and disease outbreaks in urban settings
[3]. In villages, storage of crops within houses to prevent robbery
attracts rats and their fleas [3,7]. Agricultural activities, deforestation, and bushfires also promote spread of rats and dissemination
of plague.
Finally, the discontinuation of plague surveillance since 2006
(due to financial shortages) has contributed to the reappearance of
plague in the capital’s suburbs six years after the last reported case.
Two human cases were recently confirmed there outside the
plague season, and Y. pestis was isolated from the spleen of R. rattus.
The rat population in this area showed a higher than usual flea
index, increasing the risk of Y. pestis transmission to humans and
confirming that the disease is not under control, threatening the
urban area of Antananarivo.
Effective plague prevention and control programs require upto-date information on the incidence and the distribution of the
disease. In Madagascar, plague surveillance (in humans and
rodents) is a key priority for the Plague National Control
Program (PNCP), established in 1993. The main objective of the
PNCP is to reduce mortality due to plague and especially the
mortality rate associated with the pneumonic form (,10% of
notified cases) [7]. Surveillance is conducted by the Central
Conclusion
This review highlights the complexity of the epidemiology of
plague in Madagascar and the effort made by past and present
investigators to understand the reasons for the continuous
presentation of human plague cases. Recent advances in various
scientific fields have shown that the main host reservoir, the black
rat populations of the highlands, are 1,000 times more resistant to
plague than those from the coast. This is probably due to selective
pressure. Adaptation of the plague bacillus to local ecological
conditions may have also occurred, as suggested by the emergence
and spread of new Y. pestis ribotypes in the most active foci of the
highlands. The endemic flea S. fonquerniei may also play a
significant role in the onset of the human plague season, whereas
X. cheopis would be involved in sustaining disease transmission
during several months thereafter. These various factors, along with
human features, make the plague situation quite specific in
Madagascar and reinforce the need for better surveillance.
However, many questions still remain unanswered and represent
future important challenges.
Table 1. Factors related to human plague.
Rural settings
High human plague season
Low human plague transmission
Period of the year
October to April
May to September
Weather
Warm and rainy
Dry and cold
Food availability
Absence of crops in the fields
Rice harvest in the fields
Rat population (R. rattus)
Low abundance (low reproduction/outbreaks due to
plague)
High rat reproduction (inside houses)
Flea abundance
X. cheopis in the houses/S. fonquerniei outside
Urban settings
Antananarivo city
Mahajanga coastal city
Average altitude
1,200 metres
125 metres
Period of the year
October to April
July to November
Weather
Warm and rainy
Dry and cool
Major small mammal population
R. norvegicus (the sewer rat)
Suncus murinus (the Asian shrew)
Flea abundance
X. cheopis
X. cheopis
According to [3,14,20,27,28].
doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002382.t001
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Box 1. Key Learning Points
Box 2. Key Papers in the Field
1. Madagascar is among the top three countries that
reported the most human plague cases during the past
15 years.
2. Plague occurs mainly as a rural disease, but also as an
urban epidemic and a sylvatic transmission involving
endemic rodents and fleas.
3. Plague is endemic in highlands above 800 metres of
altitude with R. rattus as the main rodent reservoir and X.
cheopis and the endemic flea S. fonquerniei as potential
vectors.
4. Multidrug-resistant Yersinia pestis was first isolated in
1995 in Madagascar.
5. In less than a century, R. rattus has developed a strong
resistance to the disease in endemic plague foci and this
capability has a genetic basis.
1. Brygoo ER (1966) Epidemiologie de la peste à Madagascar. Arch Inst Pasteur Madagascar 35: 9–147.
2. Chanteau S (2006) Atlas de la peste à Madagascar. Paris:
IRD Editions. 94 p.
3. Duplantier JM, Duchemin JB, Chanteau S, Carniel E (2005)
From the recent lessons of the Malagasy foci towards a
global understanding of the factors involved in plague
reemergence. Vet Res 36: 437–453.
4. Rahalison L, Ranjalahy M, Duplantier JM, Duchemin JB,
Ravelosaona J, et al. (2003) Susceptibility to plague of the
rodents in Antananarivo, Madagascar. Adv Exp Med Biol
529: 439–442.
5. Migliani R, Chanteau S, Rahalison L, Ratsitorahina M,
Boutin JP, et al. (2006) Epidemiological trends for human
plague in Madagascar during the second half of the 20th
century: a survey of 20,900 notified cases. Trop Med Int
Health 11: 1228–1237.
Acknowledgments
thank Sandra Telfer, Soanandrasana Rahelinirina, and Voahangy
Soarimalala for their contributions.
We thank Mamy Ratsimba for database collection and Florian Girond for
plague mapping. Most of the images are from the authors and we also
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