Friday, 23 February 2018

Skin bacteria may predict vulnerability of amphibians to killer chytrid fungus


February 19, 2018 by Ryan O'hare, Imperial College London

Bacterial communities that live on the skin of frogs and toads could provide vital clues to species' vulnerability to the lethal chytrid fungus.

The fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis or (Bd)) is currently decimating amphibian populations worldwide, and has been linked with the decline and extinction of tropical species.

According to a pioneering new genetic study, led by Zoological Society of London and involving Imperial researchers, the animals' own microbes could play a key role in the course of disease.

Previous studies indicate that the outcome of infection is linked to the virulence of the particular Bd strain the animals come into contact with, but more recent evidence suggests that bacteria living naturally on amphibian skin can actually provide protection from the fungus.

In the latest study, published in the journal Nature Communications, researchers used more than a decade of data collected from midwife toads (Alytes obstetricans) in the French and Spanish Pyrenees to investigate why certain populations of the toads demonstrated a degree of resistance to Bd, while elsewhere the disease has contributed to catastrophic declines in similar animals.

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