Science
News, Feb. 13, 2013 — The richer the assortment of amphibian species living in
a pond, the more protection that community of frogs, toads and salamanders has
against a parasitic infection that can cause severe deformities, including the
growth of extra legs, according to a new study by the University of Colorado
Boulder.
The
findings, published Feb. 14 in the journal Nature, support the idea that
greater biodiversity in larger-scale ecosystems, such as forests or grasslands,
may also provide greater protection against diseases, including those that
attack humans. For example, a larger number of mammal species in an area may
curb cases of Lyme disease, while a larger number of bird species may slow the
spread of West Nile virus.
"How
biodiversity affects the risk of infectious diseases, including those of humans
and wildlife, has become an increasingly important question," said Pieter
Johnson, an assistant professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary
Biology and lead author of the study. "But as it turns out, solidly
testing these linkages with realistic experiments has proven very challenging
in most systems."
Researchers
have struggled to design comprehensive studies that could illuminate the
possible connection between disease transmission and the number of species
living in complex ecosystems. Part of the problem is simply the enormous number
of organisms that may need to be sampled and the vast areas over which those
organisms may roam.
The
new CU-Boulder study overcomes that problem by studying smaller,
easier-to-sample ecosystems. Johnson and his team visited hundreds of ponds in
California, recording the types of amphibians living there as well as the
number of snails infected by the pathogen Ribeiroia ondatrae. Snails are an
intermediate host used by the parasite during part of its life cycle.
"One
of the great challenges in studying the diversity-disease link has been
collecting data from enough replicate systems to differentiate the influence of
diversity from background 'noise,' " Johnson said. "By collecting
data from hundreds of ponds and thousands of amphibian hosts, our group was
able to provide a rigorous test of this hypothesis, which has relevance to a
wide range of disease systems."
Johnson's
team buttressed its field observations both with laboratory tests designed to
measure how prone to infection each amphibian species is and by creating pond
replicas outside using large plastic tubs stocked with tadpoles that were
exposed to a known number of parasites. All of the experiments told the same
story, Johnson said. Greater biodiversity reduced the number of successful
amphibian infections and the number of deformed frogs.
In
all, the CU-Boulder researchers spent three years sampling 345 wetlands and
recording malformations -- which include missing, misshapen or extra sets of
hind legs -- caused by parasitic infections in 24,215 amphibians. They also
cataloged 17,516 snails. The results showed that ponds with half a dozen
amphibian species had a 78 percent reduction in parasite transmission compared
to ponds with just one amphibian species. The research team also set up
experiments in the lab and outdoors using 40 artificial ponds, each stocked with
60 amphibians and 5,000 parasites.
The
reason for the decline in parasitic infections as biodiversity increases is
likely related to the fact that ponds add amphibian species in a predictable
pattern, with the first species to appear being the most prone to infection and
the later species to appear being the least prone. For example, the research
team found that in a pond with just one type of amphibian, that amphibian was
almost always the Pacific chorus frog, a creature that is able to rapidly
reproduce and quickly colonize wetland habitats, but which is also especially
vulnerable to infection and parasite-induced deformities.
On
the other hand, the California tiger salamander was typically one of the last
species to be added to a pond community and also one of the most resistant to
parasitic infection. Therefore, in a pond with greater biodiversity, parasites
have a higher chance of encountering an amphibian that is resistant to
infection, lowering the overall success rate of transmission between infected
snails and amphibians.
This
same pattern -- of less diverse communities being made up of species that are
more susceptible to disease infection -- may well play out in more complex
ecosystems as well, Johnson said. That's because species that disperse quickly
across ecosystems appear to trade off the ability to quickly reproduce with the
ability to develop disease resistance.
"This
research reaches the surprising conclusion that the entire set of species in a
community affects the susceptibility to disease," said Doug Levey, program
director in the National Science Foundation's Division of Environmental
Biology, which helped fund the research. "Biodiversity matters."
The
sheer magnitude of the recent study also reinforces the connection between
deformed frogs and parasitic infection, Johnson said. Beginning in the
mid-1990s reports of frogs with extra, missing or misshapen legs skyrocketed,
attracting widespread attention in the media and motivating scientists to try
to figure out the cause. Johnson was among the researchers who found evidence
of a link between infection with Ribeiroia and frog deformities, though the
apparent rise in reports of deformations, and its underlying cause, remains
controversial.
While
the new study has implications beyond parasitic infections in amphibians, it
does not mean that an increase in biodiversity always results in a decrease in
disease, Johnson cautioned. Other factors also affect rates of disease
transmission. For example, a large number of mosquitoes hatching in a particular
year will increase the risk of contracting West Nile virus, even if there has
been an increase in the biodiversity of the bird population. Birds act as
"reservoir hosts" for West Nile virus, harboring the pathogen
indefinitely with no ill effects and passing the pathogen onto mosquitoes.
"Our
results indicate that higher diversity reduces the success of pathogens in
moving between hosts," Johnson said. "Nonetheless, if infection
pressure is high, for instance in a year with high abundance of vectors, there
will still be a significant risk of disease; biodiversity will simply function
to dampen transmission success."
Story
Source:
The
above story is reprinted from materials provided
by University of Colorado at Boulder.
Note:
Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please
contact the source cited above.
Journal
Reference:
Pieter
T. J. Johnson, Daniel L. Preston, Jason T. Hoverman, Katherine L. D. Richgels.
Biodiversity decreases disease through predictable changes in host community
competence. Nature, 2013; 494 (7436): 230 DOI: 10.1038/nature11883
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