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Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda

Dogs play a major role in public health because of potential transmission of zoonotic diseases, such as rabies. Dog roaming behavior has been studied worldwide, including countries in Asia, Latin America, and Oceania, while studies on dog roaming behavior are lacking in Africa. Many of those studies...

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Autores principales: Warembourg, Charlotte, Wera, Ewaldus, Odoch, Terence, Bulu, Petrus Malo, Berger-González, Monica, Alvarez, Danilo, Abakar, Mahamat Fayiz, Maximiano Sousa, Filipe, Cunha Silva, Laura, Alobo, Grace, Bal, Valentin Dingamnayal, López Hernandez, Alexis Leonel, Madaye, Enos, Meo, Maria Satri, Naminou, Abakar, Roquel, Pablo, Hartnack, Sonja, Dürr, Salome
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7970034/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33748208
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.617900
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author Warembourg, Charlotte
Wera, Ewaldus
Odoch, Terence
Bulu, Petrus Malo
Berger-González, Monica
Alvarez, Danilo
Abakar, Mahamat Fayiz
Maximiano Sousa, Filipe
Cunha Silva, Laura
Alobo, Grace
Bal, Valentin Dingamnayal
López Hernandez, Alexis Leonel
Madaye, Enos
Meo, Maria Satri
Naminou, Abakar
Roquel, Pablo
Hartnack, Sonja
Dürr, Salome
author_facet Warembourg, Charlotte
Wera, Ewaldus
Odoch, Terence
Bulu, Petrus Malo
Berger-González, Monica
Alvarez, Danilo
Abakar, Mahamat Fayiz
Maximiano Sousa, Filipe
Cunha Silva, Laura
Alobo, Grace
Bal, Valentin Dingamnayal
López Hernandez, Alexis Leonel
Madaye, Enos
Meo, Maria Satri
Naminou, Abakar
Roquel, Pablo
Hartnack, Sonja
Dürr, Salome
author_sort Warembourg, Charlotte
collection PubMed
description Dogs play a major role in public health because of potential transmission of zoonotic diseases, such as rabies. Dog roaming behavior has been studied worldwide, including countries in Asia, Latin America, and Oceania, while studies on dog roaming behavior are lacking in Africa. Many of those studies investigated potential drivers for roaming, which could be used to refine disease control measures. However, it appears that results are often contradictory between countries, which could be caused by differences in study design or the influence of context-specific factors. Comparative studies on dog roaming behavior are needed to better understand domestic dog roaming behavior and address these discrepancies. The aim of this study was to investigate dog demography, management, and roaming behavior across four countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda. We equipped 773 dogs with georeferenced contact sensors (106 in Chad, 303 in Guatemala, 217 in Indonesia, and 149 in Uganda) and interviewed the owners to collect information about the dog [e.g., sex, age, body condition score (BCS)] and its management (e.g., role of the dog, origin of the dog, owner-mediated transportation, confinement, vaccination, and feeding practices). Dog home range was computed using the biased random bridge method, and the core and extended home range sizes were considered. Using an AIC-based approach to select variables, country-specific linear models were developed to identify potential predictors for roaming. We highlighted similarities and differences in term of demography, dog management, and roaming behavior between countries. The median of the core home range size was 0.30 ha (95% range: 0.17–0.92 ha) in Chad, 0.33 ha (0.17–1.1 ha) in Guatemala, 0.30 ha (0.20–0.61 ha) in Indonesia, and 0.25 ha (0.15–0.72 ha) in Uganda. The median of the extended home range size was 7.7 ha (95% range: 1.1–103 ha) in Chad, 5.7 ha (1.5–27.5 ha) in Guatemala, 5.6 ha (1.6–26.5 ha) in Indonesia, and 5.7 ha (1.3–19.1 ha) in Uganda. Factors having a significant impact on the home range size in some of the countries included being male dog (positively), being younger than one year (negatively), being older than 6 years (negatively), having a low or a high BCS (negatively), being a hunting dog (positively), being a shepherd dog (positively), and time when the dog was not supervised or restricted (positively). However, the same outcome could have an impact in a country and no impact in another. We suggest that dog roaming behavior is complex and is closely related to the owner's socioeconomic context and transportation habits and the local environment. Free-roaming domestic dogs are not completely under human control but, contrary to wildlife, they strongly depend upon humans. This particular dog–human bound has to be better understood to explain their behavior and deal with free-roaming domestic dogs related issues.
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spelling pubmed-79700342021-03-19 Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda Warembourg, Charlotte Wera, Ewaldus Odoch, Terence Bulu, Petrus Malo Berger-González, Monica Alvarez, Danilo Abakar, Mahamat Fayiz Maximiano Sousa, Filipe Cunha Silva, Laura Alobo, Grace Bal, Valentin Dingamnayal López Hernandez, Alexis Leonel Madaye, Enos Meo, Maria Satri Naminou, Abakar Roquel, Pablo Hartnack, Sonja Dürr, Salome Front Vet Sci Veterinary Science Dogs play a major role in public health because of potential transmission of zoonotic diseases, such as rabies. Dog roaming behavior has been studied worldwide, including countries in Asia, Latin America, and Oceania, while studies on dog roaming behavior are lacking in Africa. Many of those studies investigated potential drivers for roaming, which could be used to refine disease control measures. However, it appears that results are often contradictory between countries, which could be caused by differences in study design or the influence of context-specific factors. Comparative studies on dog roaming behavior are needed to better understand domestic dog roaming behavior and address these discrepancies. The aim of this study was to investigate dog demography, management, and roaming behavior across four countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda. We equipped 773 dogs with georeferenced contact sensors (106 in Chad, 303 in Guatemala, 217 in Indonesia, and 149 in Uganda) and interviewed the owners to collect information about the dog [e.g., sex, age, body condition score (BCS)] and its management (e.g., role of the dog, origin of the dog, owner-mediated transportation, confinement, vaccination, and feeding practices). Dog home range was computed using the biased random bridge method, and the core and extended home range sizes were considered. Using an AIC-based approach to select variables, country-specific linear models were developed to identify potential predictors for roaming. We highlighted similarities and differences in term of demography, dog management, and roaming behavior between countries. The median of the core home range size was 0.30 ha (95% range: 0.17–0.92 ha) in Chad, 0.33 ha (0.17–1.1 ha) in Guatemala, 0.30 ha (0.20–0.61 ha) in Indonesia, and 0.25 ha (0.15–0.72 ha) in Uganda. The median of the extended home range size was 7.7 ha (95% range: 1.1–103 ha) in Chad, 5.7 ha (1.5–27.5 ha) in Guatemala, 5.6 ha (1.6–26.5 ha) in Indonesia, and 5.7 ha (1.3–19.1 ha) in Uganda. Factors having a significant impact on the home range size in some of the countries included being male dog (positively), being younger than one year (negatively), being older than 6 years (negatively), having a low or a high BCS (negatively), being a hunting dog (positively), being a shepherd dog (positively), and time when the dog was not supervised or restricted (positively). However, the same outcome could have an impact in a country and no impact in another. We suggest that dog roaming behavior is complex and is closely related to the owner's socioeconomic context and transportation habits and the local environment. Free-roaming domestic dogs are not completely under human control but, contrary to wildlife, they strongly depend upon humans. This particular dog–human bound has to be better understood to explain their behavior and deal with free-roaming domestic dogs related issues. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7970034/ /pubmed/33748208 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.617900 Text en Copyright © 2021 Warembourg, Wera, Odoch, Bulu, Berger-González, Alvarez, Abakar, Maximiano Sousa, Cunha Silva, Alobo, Bal, López Hernandez, Madaye, Meo, Naminou, Roquel, Hartnack and Dürr. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Veterinary Science
Warembourg, Charlotte
Wera, Ewaldus
Odoch, Terence
Bulu, Petrus Malo
Berger-González, Monica
Alvarez, Danilo
Abakar, Mahamat Fayiz
Maximiano Sousa, Filipe
Cunha Silva, Laura
Alobo, Grace
Bal, Valentin Dingamnayal
López Hernandez, Alexis Leonel
Madaye, Enos
Meo, Maria Satri
Naminou, Abakar
Roquel, Pablo
Hartnack, Sonja
Dürr, Salome
Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda
title Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda
title_full Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda
title_fullStr Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda
title_short Comparative Study of Free-Roaming Domestic Dog Management and Roaming Behavior Across Four Countries: Chad, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Uganda
title_sort comparative study of free-roaming domestic dog management and roaming behavior across four countries: chad, guatemala, indonesia, and uganda
topic Veterinary Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7970034/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33748208
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.617900
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