by – Sarah DeWeerdt | December 22, 2015, Conservation Magazine
Human-caused
changes in the environment are linked to differences in the microbiome –
the community of bacteria and other microbes that normally inhabit the
skin – of a threatened species of frog, according to a new study.
Since
the skin microbiome is essentially a major component of a frog’s immune
system, the findings suggest that land use change could
increase amphibians’ vulnerability to disease. In turn, this could be a
clue to why some populations of frogs are more susceptible than others
to a chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, that causes a fatal skin infection and has resulted in declines and even extinctions of amphibian species worldwide.
Researchers collected specimens of Blanchard’s cricket frog (Acris blanchardi)
from 11 sites in Ohio and Michigan. The inch-long frog was once
widespread throughout the central United States, but since the 1970s has
declined sharply in the northern portion of its range.
The
researchers used a cotton swab to collect a sample of each animal’s
skin microbiome and analyzed the bacteria characteristic of each one.
Frogs collected from ponds surrounded by natural forest or prairie have a
different microbiome than frogs from ponds near houses, farmland,
athletic fields, parking lots, and golf courses, the researchers report
in the journal Biological Conservation.
Other
influences on the composition of the microbiome include latitude, pond
size, and water conductivity – a measure that reflects the amount of
chemical runoff entering a pond.
The
researchers also bathed the frogs in a chemical solution that caused
them to release natural peptide secretions (NPS), antimicrobial
molecules that play a role in in amphibian immune defenses. The amount
of NPS produced by the frogs differs across sites and is also linked to
pond size and water conductivity, they found.
The
researchers tested the activity of these skin secretions against the
chytrid fungus grown in laboratory dishes. Surprisingly, higher NPS
concentrations resulted in slightly greater growth of the fungus.
Earlier this year, a different group of researchers found that differences in frog microbiomes are linked to differences in the vulnerability to B. dendrobatidis infection.
Many
researchers believe that chytrid infection is one factor contributing
to the decline of Blanchard’s cricket frog, although the populations of
frogs in this study were not infected with the fungus.
And
the new study stops short of demonstrating a causal link between
habitat change and disease resistance. (The researchers only collected
data on the frogs’ microbiome composition, not on microbiome function.)
Still, the finding that altering the habitat around a frog changes the ecosystem on
a frog is a striking one. Sometimes the changes our species touches off
are small – microscopic even – but dramatic nevertheless.
Source: Krynak K.L. et al. “Landscape and water characteristics correlate with immune defense traits across Blanchard’s cricket frog (Acris blanchardi) populations.” Biological Conservation DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2015.11.019
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