Posted on July 18, 2017, Wildlife
Society by Dan Kokilinsky
A team of researchers has
documented the first detection of the fungus responsible for snake fungal
disease in wild snakes in Europe. They wrote about their findings in a study
published in June in Scientific Reports. The fungus they found is novel strain
of Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola, based on genetic studies and culture
characteristics, they reported, so there is no evidence that it has been
introduced to Europe from North America, where snake fungal disease has
decimated snake populations.
The discovery began with a female
grass snake (Natrix natrix) with skin lesions that veterinarians from the
Zoological Society of London examined in 2015. The team used a combination of
molecular, microbiological and microscopic tests to detect Ophidiomyces
ophiodiicola, the fungus that’s responsible for snake fungal disease. The
disease is known to affect over 20 different species of wild snakes in the
eastern and Midwestern parts of the United States and was first recognized in
2006.
“Because we were aware of the
investigation and concerns about snake fungal disease in North America, it was
on our radar as a condition to look for,” said Becki Lawson, a wildlife
veterinarian at the Zoological Society of London and a coauthor of the study.
After initial discovery of the
skin lesions in the grass snake, Lawson and her colleagues examined samples of
wild snakes collected between 2010 and 2016 in Great Britain as well as the
Czech Republic, where a single skin shed from a dice snake (Natrix tessellata)
was identified as having evidence of sores consistent with the disease.
The team determined the disease
was present in several samples of grass snakes studied in Great Britain as well
as the single dice snake in the Czech Republic.
Lawson said she hopes to continue
monitoring the disease to understand its significance to wild snake health and
to determine whether it is impacting adversely at a population level leading to
declines. Great Britain has just three native snake species and it remains
unknown whether the adder (Vipera berus) and smooth snake (Coronella austriaca) are also susceptible to the condition.
Because the European fungus is
genetically novel, Lawson said, the origin of the disease remains unclear and
requires further investigation.
“Through an international team
effort, we hope to learn about the origin and impact of snake fungal disease.
We want to know whether or not there’s evidence of the fungus being introduced
historically or if it’s a native,” Lawson said. Regardless of where the fungus
originated, she said, environmental factors, such as climate, may affect the
likelihood of the disease occurring.
Lawson said she recommends that
biosecurity measures are adopted as a routine by owners of captive snakes,
ecological consultants and herpetologists, to safeguard wild and captive snake
health.
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