Marcelo H. Cassini
Grupo México
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marcelo H. Cassini.
Journal of Mammalogy | 2003
M. Laura Guichón; Mariela Borgnia; Carina Fernández Righi; Guillermo H. Cassini; Marcelo H. Cassini
Abstract This study presents the first description of social behavior and structure in native populations of the coypu (Myocastor coypus). Data from behavioral observations and trapping were used to describe group composition and behavior at 3 study areas in east-central Argentina in 1999–2000. Seven groups were described (11 coypus/group ± 1.5 SE). Groups were characterized by several adult and subadult females, 1 dominant male, several adult and subadult males, and a variable number of juveniles. Subgroups (mainly composed of juveniles and small adult males) were also identified within some groups. Group fidelity was relatively high. Amicable interactions and cooperative behaviors such as nursing in groups, allogrooming, and alarm calls occurred within groups. Agonistic interactions and marking behavior were rare but suggested that the largest male was socially dominant. This study confirms gregarious habits and a polygynous mating system for the species and provides the first report of the existence of some cooperative behaviors.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Maximiliano Nardelli; Paula Marina Scalzo; María Soledad Ramírez; María Paula Quiroga; Marcelo H. Cassini; Daniela Centrón
Background Class 1 integrons are one of the most successful elements in the acquisition, expression and spread of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARG) among clinical isolates. Little is known about the gene flow of the components of the genetic platforms of class 1 integrons within and between bacterial communities. Thus it is important to better understand the interactions among “environmental” intI1, its genetic platforms and its distribution with human activities. Methodology/Principal Findings An evaluation of two types of genetic determinants, ARG (sul1 and qacE1/qacEΔ1 genes) and lateral genetic elements (LGE) (intI1, ISCR1 and tniC genes) in a model of a culture-based method without antibiotic selection was conducted in a gradient of anthropogenic disturbances in a Patagonian island recognized as being one of the last regions containing wild areas. The intI1, ISCR1 genes and intI1 pseudogenes that were found widespread throughout natural communities were not associated with urbanization (p>0.05). Each ARG that is embedded in the most common genetic platform of clinical class 1 integrons, showed different ecological and molecular behaviours in environmental samples. While the sul1 gene frequency was associated with urbanization, the qacE1/qacEΔ1 gene showed an adaptive role to several habitats. Conclusions/Significance The high frequency of intI1 pseudogenes suggests that, although intI1 has a deleterious impact within several genomes, it can easily be disseminated among natural bacterial communities. The widespread occurrence of ISCR1 and intI1 throughout Patagonian sites with different degree of urbanization, and within different taxa, could be one of the causes of the increasing frequency of multidrug-resistant isolates that have characterized Argentina for decades. The flow of ARG and LGE between natural and clinical communities cannot be explained with a single general process but is a direct consequence of the interaction of multiple factors operating at molecular, ecological, phylogenetic and historical levels.
Journal of Mammalogy | 2007
Agustín M. Abba; Sergio F. Vizcaíno; Marcelo H. Cassini
Abstract We evaluated the effects of land use on the distribution of 3 sympatric species of armadillos, Chaetophractus villosus, C. vellerosus, and Dasypus hybridus, on 34 farms in the eastern Pampas. We characterized 4 soil and vegetation variables around each burrow located during surveys of these farms, and related burrow abundance to 10 variables used to characterize each farm. C. vellerosus was the most specialized, using primarily native woodlands and areas with calcareous soil. D. hybridus was associated with natural grasslands and avoided cultivated pastures, and was negatively related to the number of dogs that lived on the farms. C. villosus, the most abundant species, was found in all 4 types of habitats, but its distribution depended on the intensity of hunting on each farm.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2013
Andrea Karina Merkier; María Cecilia Rodríguez; Ana Togneri; Silvina P. Brengi; Carolina Osuna; Mariana Pichel; Marcelo H. Cassini; Daniela Centrón
ABSTRACT Serratia marcescens causes health care-associated infections with important morbidity and mortality. Particularly, outbreaks produced by multidrug-resistant isolates of this species, which is already naturally resistant to several antibiotics, including colistin, are usually described with high rates of fatal outcomes throughout the world. Thus, it is important to survey factors associated with increasing frequency and/or emergence of multidrug-resistant S. marcescens nosocomial infections. We report the investigation and control of an outbreak with 40% mortality due to multidrug-resistant S. marcescens infections that happened from November 2007 to April 2008 after treatment with colistin for Acinetobacter baumannii meningitis was started at hospital H1 in 2005. Since that year, the epidemiological pattern of frequently recovered species has changed, with an increase of S. marcescens and Proteus mirabilis infections in 2006 in concordance with a significant decrease of the numbers of P. aeruginosa and A. baumannii isolates. A single pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) cluster of S. marcescens isolates was identified during the outbreak. When this cluster was compared with S. marcescens strains (n = 21) from 10 other hospitals (1997 to 2010), it was also identified in both sporadic and outbreak isolates circulating in 4 hospitals in Argentina. In132::ISCR1::bla CTX-M-2 was associated with the multidrug-resistant cluster with epidemic behavior when isolated from outbreaks. Standard infection control interventions interrupted transmission of this cluster even when treatment with colistin continued in several wards of hospital H1 until now. Optimizing use of colistin should be achieved simultaneously with improved infection control to prevent the emergence of species naturally resistant to colistin, such as S. marcescens and P. mirabilis.
Revista Chilena de Historia Natural | 2011
Agustín M. Abba; Guillermo H. Cassini; Marcelo H. Cassini; Sergio F. Vizcaíno
Fil: Abba, Agustin Manuel. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas; Argentina
European Journal of Wildlife Research | 2011
Laura Fasola; Juan Muzio; Claudio Ernesto Chehébar; Marcelo H. Cassini; David W. Macdonald
Following the establishment of American mink farms outside North America, the species has successfully invaded Europe and South America, and in some places, their presence demonstrably threatens native biodiversity. We surveyed for mink signs along the Andean Patagonian forest in Argentina from 38°52′ S to 54°52′ S, revealing that their range has now expanded to span 800 km of contiguous occupation on the continent including several types of wetlands and has also colonised Tierra del Fuego Island. Rate of expansion was estimated using two methodologies and varied between 5.53 and 9.00 km/year (linear method, large-scale spread) and 4.86 km/year (within a more restricted area, grid method). Diet throughout the region fitted the generalist pattern described for mink elsewhere. Native small mammals were the most frequently consumed category. Crustaceans (patchily distributed in the region) occurred in the diet in proportion to their availability (rs=0.961, p<0.001), but that of waterfowl did not (rs=0.178, p=0.713). Diet was evaluated at one lake throughout a year, revealing that consumption of crustaceans fell in the cold months when bird abundance increased. Based on published work on the impact of American mink as an introduced species in Patagonia and elsewhere, together with our own survey, we discuss the implications of this invasion for biodiversity conservation in Argentinean Patagonia and the associated dilemmas for management policy.
Hydrobiologia | 2008
Juan I. Túnez; Humberto L. Cappozzo; Marcelo H. Cassini
The aim of this work was to analyse those characteristics of the Atlantic coast that are associated with distribution, abundance and breeding activity of Otaria flavescens at three ecological scales. We followed a research strategy that consists in looking at the variables that are associated with the pattern of distribution at regional and landscape scales, instead of following local population in time. We used bibliographic data of censuses carried out between 1946 and 1997 and a Geographic Information System (GIS) to integrate information proceeding from censuses and different environmental variables. At a regional scale, we found that the distribution of breeding colonies did not vary in the period of time analysed and was associated with the pattern of occupation of the coast and the tide width. There was a significant decrease in abundance between 1946 and 1997. In ‘north-central Patagonia’, the segment of coast with the highest number of sea lions in Argentina, distribution of colonies was associated with islands availability and negatively correlated with places were anthropogenic disturbance was high. At a local scale, breeding colonies were positive associated with slight slope coasts and negatively associated to rocky beaches. We identify those characteristics of the coast associated with distribution of breeding colonies of O. flavescens, which operate at different ecological and temporal scales.
Naturwissenschaften | 2008
Humberto L. Cappozzo; Juan I. Túnez; Marcelo H. Cassini
Most colonial pinnipeds form extreme clusters of breeding females that cannot be entirely explained by the distribution of sites for reproduction. Avoidance of male harassment has been postulated as an important determinant of reproductive aggregation in this group of mammals. Female gregariousness can reduce harassment by resident males by two mechanisms; directly by the ‘dilution effect’ or indirectly because resident males that defend large female groups are less harassing. In order to investigate the relationship between male harassment and female gregariousness in relation to the size of breeding groups, we analysed the behaviour of dominant males and their females in a breeding colony of Otaria flavescens. Females in large breeding groups received less harassment by resident males due to dilution effects and because males that defended a large group interacted less frequently with females than males with small groups.
Polar Biology | 2010
Jonatan J. Gomez; Ana C. Gozzi; David W. Macdonald; Emilce Gallo; Daniela Centrón; Marcelo H. Cassini
In coasts bordering highly productive seas, there can be a flux of resources to the terrestrial ecosystem, and terrestrial carnivores can use marine prey extensively. Two native, endangered species (otter Lontra provocax and culpeo fox Pseudalopex culpaeus lycoides) and two exotic species (mink Neovison vison and grey fox Pseudalopex griseus) inhabit the Beagle coast. The objectives of this paper are: (1) to describe the diet, habitat use and distribution of otters, mink and foxes on the coast of the Beagle channel and (2) to discuss the role of marine resources in the ecological interactions among these species. Diet was determined from the analysis of 245 faeces, and distribution was established from sign surveys. Marine prey occurred in the scats of 98.3, 70.4, 35.5 and 18.2% of otters, mink, culpeo and grey foxes, respectively. Other terrestrial species also use marine resources in Southern Patagonia. All this evidence suggests that the Fueguian coastal channels provide an illuminating example of allochthonous food subsidies from the sea. In the community of four sympatric predators, two native (and endangered) and two exotic, coexistence appears to be facilitated by a renewing marine food subsidy.
Naturwissenschaften | 2009
Marcelo H. Cassini; Laura Fasola; Claudio Chehébar; David W. Macdonald
The Southern river otter or ‘huillin’, Lontra provocax, is an endangered species endemic of the Andean Patagonian region of Argentina and Chile. It feeds almost exclusively on the genera of macro-crustacea: Aegla and Sammastacus. The aim of this study was to analyse the role of food availability on the huillin’s distribution using a scale-dependent analysis of crustacean and otter distributions. We compared the distributions of otters and macro-crustaceans along a north–south regional gradient, between river basins of northern Patagonia, in an altitudinal gradient within a river basin, and between habitat types within a lake. We investigated the distribution of otters by sign surveys along lake shores, river banks and marine coasts, and of crustaceans using surveys in the water, undigested remains in mink (Mustela vison) scats, presence of external skeletons at the waterside and through interviews with local people. Our results show that there were heterogeneities in the distributions of macro-crustaceans at four scales and these were generally reflected in the distributions of freshwater otters. We conclude that the main factor limiting the distributions of L. provocax in freshwater environments is the availability of macro-crustaceans. This paper shows how scale-dependent type analyses of population distribution serves as a method for identifying key environmental factors for species for which the use of long-term demographies is unfeasible.