Kriger Kerry M, Pereoglou Felicia, Hero Jean-Marc
Griffith University, Centre for Innovative Conservation Strategies, PMB 50 Gold Coast Mail Centre, QLD 9726, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2007 Oct;21(5):1280-90. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00777.x.
Chytridiomycosis is a recently emerged, infectious skin disease of amphibians that has been linked directly to mass mortalities, population declines, and species extinctions worldwide. An understanding of the factors that limit the distribution and abundance of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (the etiological agent of chytridiomycosis) is urgently required. We conducted disease surveys at 31 lowland sites distributed north-south along 2315 km of the Australian east coast that encompassed 20.8 degrees of latitude. A total of 863 adult male stony creek frogs (Litoria lesueuri complex) were sampled, and the overall prevalence of B. dendrobatidis infection was 26%. B. dendrobatidis was detected at 77% of the sites, including sites at the northern and southern limits of the latitudinal transect. Frogs from temperate regions, however, had significantly more intense infections than did their tropical counterparts, often carrying an order of magnitude more B. dendrobatidis zoospores, suggesting that at low elevations, temperate frogs are at higher risk of chytridiomycosis-induced mortality than are tropical frogs. The prevalence and intensity of B. dendrobatidis infections were significantly greater at sites with high rainfall (>33 mm in the 30 days prior to sampling) and cool temperatures (stream temperature 1 h after sunset < 23 degrees C). Although climatic variables explained much of the variation in the prevalence and intensity of B. dendrobatidis infections between infected and uninfected sites, frog snout-vent length was consistently the best predictor of infection levels across infected sites. Small frogs were more likely to be infected and carried more intense infections than larger frogs, suggesting either that frogs can outgrow their chytrid infections or that the disease induces developmental stress that limits growth. Our results will directly assist amphibian disease researchers and wildlife managers, whose conservation efforts should focus on those amphibian populations living within the B. dendrobatidis climatic envelope that we have described.
壶菌病是一种最近出现的两栖动物感染性皮肤病,与全球范围内的大规模死亡、种群数量下降和物种灭绝直接相关。迫切需要了解限制蛙壶菌(壶菌病的病原体)分布和丰度的因素。我们在澳大利亚东海岸2315公里沿线南北分布的31个低地地点进行了疾病调查,这些地点跨越了20.8度的纬度。总共对863只成年雄性石溪蛙(利氏姬蛙复合体)进行了采样,蛙壶菌感染的总体患病率为26%。在77%的地点检测到了蛙壶菌,包括纬度样带南北两端的地点。然而,来自温带地区的青蛙感染程度明显比热带地区的青蛙更严重,通常携带的蛙壶菌游动孢子数量要多一个数量级,这表明在低海拔地区,温带青蛙比热带青蛙面临更高的壶菌病致死风险。在降雨量大(采样前30天内降雨量>33毫米)且温度凉爽(日落后1小时溪流温度<23摄氏度)的地点,蛙壶菌感染的患病率和感染强度显著更高。尽管气候变量解释了感染和未感染地点之间蛙壶菌感染患病率和感染强度的大部分差异,但青蛙的吻肛长度始终是感染地点感染水平的最佳预测指标。小青蛙比大青蛙更容易感染且感染程度更严重,这表明要么青蛙可以随着生长摆脱壶菌感染,要么这种疾病会引发限制生长的发育压力。我们的研究结果将直接帮助两栖动物疾病研究人员和野生动物管理者,他们的保护工作应侧重于我们所描述的生活在蛙壶菌气候范围内的两栖动物种群。