Date: March 4, 2015
Source: San Francisco State University
A
deadly fungus responsible for the extinction of more than 200 amphibian
species worldwide has coexisted harmlessly with animals in Illinois and
Korea for more than a century, a pair of studies have found.
Amphibians
in Illinois have been coexisting with the fungus Batrachochytrium
dendrobatidis, or Bd, for at least 126 years without adverse effects
seen in other parts of the world such as mass-die offs, according to
research published Jan. 13 in the journal Biological Conservation. In a
study published March 4 in PLOS ONE, researchers were able to date the
fungus in Korea back to 1911. The results will help scientists better
understand the disease caused by Bd, chytridiomycosis, and the
conditions under which it can be survived.
"Part
of understanding a disease is understanding the dynamics of the host
and pathogen," said Vance Vredenburg, an associate professor of biology
at San Francisco State University and co-author of the studies, who has
been researching Bd for more than a decade. "What we have now is a
benchmark where the dynamics have been stable for well over 100 years."
Before
the new study, the earliest confirmed instance of Bd was in Brazil
during the 1890s. The discovery in Illinois also dates back 50 years
earlier than previous instances for North America.
Chytridiomycosis,
or chytrid, has driven more than 200 amphibian species worldwide to
extinction and poses the greatest threat to vertebrate biodiversity of
any known disease. Vredenburg has tracked the spread of the disease
since 2003 in such places as the Sierra Nevada and Andes mountains,
including identifying such common carriers as the African clawed frog,
the American bullfrog and Pacific chorus frog. Human transportation of
these animals is one way to explain how Bd -- and the resulting disease
chytridiomycosis -- is introduced to new populations, sparking mass
die-offs.
"This
fungus has been emerging all over the world and causing major, major
problems," Vredenburg said. "Taking the information we now have from
this research, we can look at the animals in Illinois and Korea, figure
out how they are surviving and translate that knowledge to other parts
of the world where we see massive declines of amphibian populations."
One
key difference in the two studies is that, while testing showed that Bd
was widespread in Illinois dating back to the 1880s, the disease was
far less common in Korea during the 1900s than it is today. That,
Vredenburg said, indicates that the behavior of the fungus differs
depending on location, a key piece of information for biologists to keep
in mind when studying its spread.
The
study also validates the effectiveness of testing for Bd in museum
specimens, which a graduate student, Tina Cheng, pioneered at SF State.
Some of the museum specimens are more than 100 years old, prompting
concerns that older DNA may have degraded, leading to "false negatives,"
but Vredenburg and his colleagues found the fungus on some of the
oldest samples available. During the two studies, researchers tested
more than 1,200 amphibian samples collected between 1888 and 2004.
The
next step, Vredenburg said, is to pinpoint which attributes allow
Illinois-area and Korean amphibians to co-exist with the fungus so that
biologists can use that information in their efforts to study this
disease in other parts of the globe and prevent further extinctions.
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by San Francisco State University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal References:
- Brooke L. Talley, Carly R. Muletz, Vance T. Vredenburg, Robert C. Fleischer, Karen R. Lips. A century of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis in Illinois amphibians (1888–1989). Biological Conservation, 2015; 182: 254 DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2014.12.007
- Jonathan J. Fong, Tina L. Cheng, Arnaud Bataille, Allan P. Pessier, Bruce Waldman, Vance T. Vredenburg. Early 1900s Detection of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis in Korean Amphibians. PLOS ONE, 2015; 10 (3): e0115656 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115656
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