By KAREN R. LIPS and JOSEPH R. MENDELSON III, NOV. 14, 2014, NY Times
FOR
the past 25 years we have watched helplessly as a wide range of
amphibians around the world have died from a pathogenic fungus, known as
Bd (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis). Now, yet another fungal contagion
appears to have been unleashed. This one is spreading among salamanders
in parts of Europe and threatens devastation.
This
new menace, known as Bs (Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans), appears to
have invaded Europe from Asia by way of the pet trade. In Asia,
salamanders carry the infection but don’t become sick from it. But
European salamanders are particularly susceptible to its pathogenic
effects. The mortality rate is 96 percent. The fungus has also been
fatal to American salamanders in lab tests.
This
fungus has not arrived in the United States yet, so far as we know. But
if it does, it is likely to spread across the country, as it appears to
be doing in Europe, with catastrophic consequences. The continental
United States has more species of salamanders than any other place on
earth.
Much
remains to be discovered about the biology of this fungus. But its
similarity to Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis has scientists deeply
worried. That pathogen has decimated amphibian populations across the
planet, resulting in the extinction of many species. Its origin remains
unknown, though its rise clearly seems to have been abetted by the
global trade in amphibians.
The
fungus had spread widely before scientists even detected what was
happening. Once we did, it was too late. Watching those die-offs has
left biologists like ourselves feeling at times more like
paleontologists.
Unless
the United States becomes more aggressive in its approach to live
animal imports, this latest threat will reach our country. The pet trade
imports millions of wild-caught Asian salamanders. As a nation, we are
both blindfolded and handcuffed against the threat of invasive wildlife
disease.
To
protect America’s native salamanders, immediate steps should be taken
to halt the importation of nonnative ones. We also need laws requiring
the testing of all imported live animals for disease to keep out those
infected with pathogens or parasites. Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans
is the latest emerging infectious disease threat, but there is no reason
to believe it will be the last.
The Fish and Wildlife Service
holds the key to quick action. Under the Lacey Act, passed in 1900 to
protect wildlife, the agency can block the importation of a species by
declaring it potentially injurious to native wildlife and habitat. The
declaration would also regulate trade across state lines.
Congress
should also approve the Invasive Fish and Wildlife Prevention Act,
which is awaiting action in the House and Senate. This legislation would
substantially improve the ability of the Fish and Wildlife Service to
monitor and control invasive fish and wildlife species and diseases.
Live-animal
importers should also step up and stop importing salamanders. In the
past, voluntary measures by the industry helped prevent the transmission
of fish diseases in the aquaculture industry. Informational and
educational campaigns about the threat are also vital.
Preventing
an invasion by Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans is a conservation and
policy-making challenge, but it also offers a chance to apply lessons
from the apocalyptic spread of
That
invasion continues to haunt field biologists. We encountered tropical
forests practically devoid of amphibians that were once teeming with
dozens of species of them. We watched mass die-offs. We tried to save
threatened species by airlifting them out of infected areas, breeding
them in captivity and searching for answers through field and lab
research.
None
of it worked. No cure exists for wild populations. Losses of amphibians
continued around the globe. We’ve seen no significant recovery of
populations. Worse, the fungus persists in the environment, preventing
the reintroduction of captive animals.
This
time, we have ample warning to prevent the arrival of Batrachochytrium
salamandrivorans into the United States. We know what kind of killer
we’re dealing with. A global network of biologists is studying its
movements. Government agencies are on the alert.
Let’s get it right this time.
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