201. Hantaan Virus Surveillance Targeting Small Mammals at Nightmare Range, a High Elevation Military Training Area, Gyeonggi Province, Republic of Korea
- Author
-
Jeong Ah Kim, Peter V. Nunn, Terry A. Klein, Sung Tae Chong, Jin Won Song, Won-Keun Kim, Sook Young Lee, and Heung Chul Kim
- Subjects
Male ,Apodemus agrarius ,Veterinary medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,Soricomorpha ,Apodemus peninsulae ,Republic of Korea ,Animals ,Humans ,Micromys minutus ,lcsh:Science ,Hantaan virus ,Hantavirus ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Shrews ,lcsh:R ,Sciuridae ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,Microtus fortis ,Rats ,Muridae ,Military Personnel ,Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome ,lcsh:Q ,Female ,Crocidura lasiura ,Research Article - Abstract
Rodent-borne disease surveillance was conducted at Nightmare Range (NM-R), near the demilitarized zone in northeast Gyeonggi Province, Republic of Korea, to identify hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) risks for a mountainous high-elevation (500 m) military training site. Monthly surveys were conducted from January 2008-December 2009. A total of 1,720 small mammals were captured belonging to the Orders Rodentia [Families, Sciuridae (1 species) and Muridae (7 species)] and Soricomorpha [Family, Soricidae (1species)]. Apodemus agrarius, the primary reservoir for Hantaan virus (HTNV), accounted for 89.9% (1,546) of all small mammals captured, followed by Myodes regulus (4.0%), Crocidura lasiura (3.9%), Micromys minutus (1.4%), Mus musculus (0.3%), Microtus fortis (0.2%), Apodemus peninsulae (0.2%), Tamias sibiricus (0.1%), and Rattus norvegicus (
- Published
- 2015