Experience from outbreaks of lethal Bd
fungus may help defend North America ’s
salamander paradise
February 13, 2016 WASHINGTON
— North America ,
a Garden of Eden for salamanders, faces a dire threat from a recently
discovered fungal disease. But biologists say that lessons learned from the
last worldwide wave of amphibian die-offs are helping to rush a new animal
import ban and other measures into effect that could prevent the introduction
and spread of the deadly disease here.
Fears of widespread die-offs come from
the 2013 discovery in northern Europe
of a previously unrecognized Batrachochytrium fungus nicknamed Bsal (SN: 10/5/13, p.
18).
This fungus has already ravaged populations of rare salamanders in the Netherlands
by eating away their skin. There’s no known way to rid most wild populations of
the disease. But the good news is that there’s no sign — yet — that Bsal has
reached North America, Karen Lips of the University of Maryland in College Park
reported February 12 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
Lips was one of several biologists at the
meeting who has had the rare horror of witnessing a previous wave of lethal
fungus, called Bd, sweep through new territory and kill amphibians by the
thousands. She and colleagues pleaded for a faster, more informed attempt at
defense this time.
What she and fellow speakers called the
most important defense has just been put in place: an interim measure from the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that, as of January 28, bans imports of
201 species of salamander to the United States .
Even moving those species across state lines is no longer permitted. This
pet-trade measure matters, the speakers explained, because international
shipping of animals infected with Bsal apparently carried the fungus from its
longtime home in Asia to Europe ,
where such species as fire salamanders had no resistance to it (SN: 11/29/14, p.
6).
With a Bsal threat looming in the United States ,
herpetologist Joe Mendelson of Zoo Atlanta urged anyone who notices a dead
salamander to report it via the new Amphibian Disease Portal. One of the
lessons of the last die-offs was how difficult it was for scientists to observe
catastrophes as they happened. Infections burned through remote sites in
months, with scavengers quickly cleaning up carcasses. To catch the earliest
signs of any Bsal outbreaks, “we want to see dead salamanders,” Mendelson said.
“Well, we don’t want to…”
If the Bsal pathogen slips in to North
America, such widespread species as the Eastern newt could prove disastrously
susceptible, said Ana Longo of the University of Maryland
and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. North America has the greatest diversity of
salamander species in the world, with close to 200 of the known 700 or so
species. The Appalachians and the West Coast are especially rich in species,
and the threat of disease savaging them has amphibian researchers “all very
worried,” said Patricia Burrowes of University
of Puerto Rico
in San Juan .
Burrowes’ research on the disease ecology
of Bd, the first amphibian-killing fungus to be discovered, has helped
demonstrate just how difficult managing, or even predicting, outcomes of
disease invasion can be. The other animals sharing the habitat, the microbes
that teem on their skin and the details of local climate all make a difference.
Burrowes’ current project shows that even small patches of sunlight beaming
through gaps in the canopy of a tropical forest could, in theory, create
refuges where the Bd fungus might not grow well on a basking animal.
The biggest lesson that scientists
learned from the previous invasion is that one fungus disease can quickly crash
local populations of a lot of species, says Vance Vredenburg of San Francisco State University .
He was working at a remote lake in California
over a decade ago when mountain yellow-legged frogs that had looked fine the
day before were floating belly up by the hundreds the next day. “We just
couldn’t believe what was happening.”
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