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A systematic review of rodent pest research in Afro-Malagasy small-holder farming systems: are we asking the right questions?

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dc.creator Swanepoel, L. H.
dc.creator Swanepoel, C. M.
dc.creator Brown, P. R.
dc.creator Eiseb, S. J.
dc.creator Goodman, S. M.
dc.creator Keith, M.
dc.creator Kirsten, F.
dc.creator Leirs, H.
dc.creator Mahlab, T. A. M.
dc.creator Makundi, R. H.
dc.creator Malebane, P.
dc.creator Maltitz, E. F.
dc.creator Massawe, A. W.
dc.creator Monadjem, A.
dc.creator Mulungu, L. S.
dc.creator Singleton, G. R.
dc.creator Taylor, P. J.
dc.creator Soarimalala, V.
dc.creator Belmain, S. R.
dc.date 2018-06-14T06:35:05Z
dc.date 2018-06-14T06:35:05Z
dc.date 2017
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:52:17Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:52:17Z
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/2355
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/92398
dc.description Research article
dc.description Rodent pests are especially problematic in terms of agriculture and public health since they can inflict considerable economic damage associated with their abundance, diversity, generalist feeding habits and high reproductive rates. To quantify rodent pest impacts and identify trends in rodent pest research impacting on small-holder agriculture in the Afro-Malagasy region we did a systematic review of research outputs from 1910 to 2015, by developing an a priori defined set of criteria to allow for replication of the review process. We followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. We reviewed 162 publications, and while rodent pest research was spatially distributed across Africa (32 countries, including Madagascar), there was a disparity in number of studies per country with research biased towards four countries (Tanzania [25%], Nigeria [9%], Ethiopia [9%], Kenya [8%]) accounting for 51% of all rodent pest research in the Afro-Malagasy region. There was a disparity in the research themes addressed by Tanzanian publications compared to publications from the rest of the Afro-Malagasy region where research in Tanzania had a much more applied focus (50%) compared to a more basic research approach (92%) in the rest of the Afro-Malagasy region. We found that pest rodents have a significant negative effect on the Afro-Malagasy small-holder farming communities. Crop losses varied between cropping stages, storage and crops and the highest losses occurred during early cropping stages (46% median loss during seedling stage) and the mature stage (15% median loss). There was a scarcity of studies investigating the effectiveness of various management actions on rodent pest damage and population abundance. Our analysis highlights that there are inadequate empirical studies focused on developing sustainable control methods for rodent pests and rodent pests in the Africa-Malagasy context is generally ignored as a research topic
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher PLOS ONE
dc.subject Rodents.
dc.subject Pest.
dc.subject Afro-Malagasy.
dc.subject Small-holder.
dc.subject Farming systems.
dc.title A systematic review of rodent pest research in Afro-Malagasy small-holder farming systems: are we asking the right questions?
dc.type Article


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