SUMMARYAmerican cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL) is a complex disease with a rich diversity of
animal host species. This diversity imposes a challenge, since understanding ACL
transmission requires the adequate identification of reservoir hosts, those species able
to be a source of additional infections. In this study we present results from an ACL
cross-sectional serological survey of 51 dogs (Canis familiaris), where
we used diagnostic tests that measure dog's exposure to Leishmania spp.
parasites. We did our research in Panamá, at a village that has undergone significant
ecosystem level transformations. We found an ACL seroprevalence of 47% among dogs, and
their exposure was positively associated with dog age and abundance of sand fly vectors in
the houses of dog owners. Using mathematical models, which were fitted to data on the
proportion of positive tests as function of dog age, we estimated a basic reproductive
number (R0 ± s.e.) of 1·22 ± 0·09 that indicates the
disease is endemically established in the dogs. Nevertheless, this information by itself
is insufficient to incriminate dogs as ACL reservoirs, given the inability to find
parasites (or their DNA) in seropositive dogs and previously reported failures to
experimentally infect vectors feeding on dogs with ACL parasites.