Click Banner For More Info See All Sponsors

So Long and Thanks for All the Fish!

This site is now closed permanently to new posts.
We recommend you use the new Townsy Cafe!

Click anywhere but the link to dismiss overlay!

Results 1 to 1 of 1

  • Share this thread on:
  • Follow: No Email   
  • Thread Tools
  1. TopTop #1
    geomancer's Avatar
    geomancer
     

    Fungus out! The frog resistance is here

    https://www.newscientist.com/article...e-is-here.html

    Good news for once, although another fungus, the white nose disease, is wiping out North American bat populations

    Fungus out! The frog resistance is here

    10 December 2010 by Wendy Zukerman
    Magazine issue 2790. Subscribe and save

    FROGS across Australia and the US may be recovering from a fungal disease that has devastated populations around the world.

    "It's happening across a number of species," says Michael Mahony at the University of Newcastle in New South Wales, who completed a 20-year study of frogs along the Great Dividing Range in Australia for the Earthwatch Institute. Between 1990 and 1998 the populations of several frog species crashed due to chytridiomycosis infection (chytrid) caused by the pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, but Mahony's surveys suggest that the frogs are re-establishing.

    Barred river frogs (Mixophyes esiteratus) disappeared, he says, but now up to 30 of the animals have returned to streams across Australia's Central Coast. The tusked-frog (Adelotus) and several tree frog species (Litoria) have also returned there. Ross Alford at James Cook University in Townsville, Queensland, says tree frogs are also repopulating other areas of the state after their numbers nosedived. Some have even reached pre-infection levels.

    In the US there are also signs of recovery. Roland Knapp at Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory at the University of California says mountain yellow-legged frogs (Rana muscosas) - once "driven virtually to extinction" - are returning. The big question is: are frogs now beating chytrid?

    Using electronic tagging to track frogs, Knapp (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0912886107) and Mahony have separately found that recovering frogs are living with low-level infections of the fungus.

    It is possible, they say, that the fungus has weakened in recovering areas. Knapp says there is evidence that the frogs are evolving. Initial findings from his team show that frogs from recovered populations can survive when challenged with a fungal strain, unlike frogs with no previous exposure to the fungus, which died after it colonised their skin.

    At Vanderbilt University Medical Centre, Nashville, Alford and Louise Rollins-Smith found that a population of Australian green-eyed tree frogs previously decimated by the fungus produced more anti-microbial peptides - which inhibit fungal growth - on their skin than a less affected population (Diversity and Distribution, vol 16, p 703). "It's quite likely that populations are adapting and developing better defences," says Rollins-Smith.

    Worldwide, most amphibian communities are not recovering, though earlier this year Ursina Tobler at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, showed for the first time that even in devastated populations, some tadpoles can survive infection (PLoS One, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010927).
    | Login or Register (free) to reply publicly or privately   Email

  2. Gratitude expressed by:

Similar Threads

  1. Frog bashing 101
    By Sara S in forum Censored & Un-Censored
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 12-10-2010, 06:14 PM
  2. Deadly New Fungus Emerging in Oregon Expected To Spread
    By Zeno Swijtink in forum WaccoReader
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 04-27-2010, 07:56 AM
  3. Clinical Foot Infection/Fungus Study - Volunteers Needed
    By baraka in forum General Community
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 03-23-2009, 04:39 PM
  4. frog joke
    By mykil in forum Censored & Un-Censored
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 06-09-2008, 12:45 PM

Bookmarks