Date: May 6, 2016
Source: University of Florida
Misty mountains, glistening
forests and blue-green lakes make Cameroon, the wettest part of Africa, a
tropical wonderland for amphibians.
The country holds more than half
the species living on the continent, including dozens of endemic frogs -- an
animal that has been under attack across the world by the pervasive chytrid
fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis). Africa has been mostly spared from the
deadly and rampant pathogen that wiped out entire species in Australia,
Madagascar and Panama, until now.
University of Florida
herpetologist David Blackburn and colleagues at the Museum für Naturkunde in
Berlin have documented declines in frog species on Cameroon's Mount Oku and
Mount Manengouba over a span of more than 12 years. The scientists link the
decline of at least five species of frogs found only in these mountains to
chytrid, which may have been exacerbated by habitat destruction, pollution and
climate change resulting in weaker and more susceptible frogs, said Blackburn,
an associate curator of herpetology at the Florida Museum of Natural History on
the UF campus.
"There's been this
perception that frogs in Africa are not affected by chytrid at all, but we have
evidence of the disease in some animals," said Blackburn, co-author of a
new study appearing online this week in PLOS ONE. "This is the first
real case of a decline across multiple amphibian species in Africa."
Study scientists collected and
documented abundance and diversity of frog species living on the two mountains
before and after the immergence of chytrid in the area between 2008-2010. The
persistent pestilence latches onto the frog's skin and can spread internally to
the animal's organs, quickly leading to death.
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