Hartigan Ashlie, Phalen David N, Slapeta Jan
Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia.
Parasit Vectors. 2010 Jun 10;3(1):50. doi: 10.1186/1756-3305-3-50.
A parasite morphologically indistinguishable from Myxidium immersum (Myxozoa: Myxosporea) found in gallbladders of the invasive cane toad (Bufo marinus) was identified in Australian frogs. Because no written record exists for such a parasite in Australian endemic frogs in 19th and early 20th century, it was assumed that the cane toad introduced this parasite. While we cannot go back in time ourselves, we investigated whether material at the museum of natural history could be used to retrieve parasites, and whether they were infected at the time of their collection (specifically prior to and after the cane toad translocation to Australia in 1935).
Using the herpetological collection at the Australian Museum we showed that no myxospores were found in any animals (n = 115) prior to the cane toad invasion (1879-1935). The green and golden bell frog (Litoria aurea), the Peron's tree frog (Litoria peronii), the green tree frog (Litoria caerulea) and the striped marsh frog (Limnodynastes peronii) were all negative for the presence of the parasite using microscopy of the gallbladder content and its histology. These results were sufficient to conclude that the population was free from this disease (at the expected minimum prevalence of 5%) at 99.7% confidence level using the 115 voucher specimens in the Australian Museum. Similarly, museum specimens (n = 29) of the green and golden bell frog from New Caledonia, where it was introduced in 19th century, did not show the presence of myxospores. The earliest specimen positive for myxospores in a gallbladder was a green tree frog from 1966. Myxospores were found in eight (7.1%, n = 112) frogs in the post cane toad introduction period.
Australian wildlife is increasingly under threat, and amphibian decline is one of the most dramatic examples. The museum material proved essential to directly support the evidence of parasite emergence in Australian native frogs. This parasite can be considered one of the luckiest parasites, because it has found an empty niche in Australia. It now flourishes in > 20 endemic and exotic frog species, but its consequences are yet to be fully understood.
在澳大利亚青蛙体内发现了一种寄生虫,其形态与在入侵的蔗蟾蜍(海蟾蜍,Bufo marinus)胆囊中发现的浸没黏孢子虫(黏体动物门:黏孢子纲)无法区分。由于19世纪和20世纪初澳大利亚本土青蛙中没有关于这种寄生虫的书面记录,因此推测是蔗蟾蜍引入了这种寄生虫。虽然我们无法亲自回到过去,但我们调查了自然历史博物馆的标本是否可用于检索寄生虫,以及它们在采集时(特别是在1935年蔗蟾蜍引入澳大利亚之前和之后)是否受到感染。
利用澳大利亚博物馆的爬行动物标本集,我们发现,在蔗蟾蜍入侵之前(1879 - 1935年),没有在任何动物(n = 115)中发现黏孢子虫。通过对胆囊内容物及其组织学进行显微镜检查,绿金铃蛙(Litoria aurea)、佩龙氏树蛙(Litoria peronii)、绿树蛙(Litoria caerulea)和条纹沼蛙(Limnodynastes peronii)体内均未发现该寄生虫。利用澳大利亚博物馆的115份凭证标本,这些结果足以得出结论:在99.7%的置信水平下,该种群没有这种疾病(预期最低患病率为5%)。同样,19世纪引入了绿金铃蛙的新喀里多尼亚的博物馆标本(n = 29)也未显示有黏孢子虫存在。胆囊中最早检测到黏孢子虫阳性的标本是一只1966年的绿树蛙。在蔗蟾蜍引入后的时期,在112只青蛙中有8只(7.1%)发现了黏孢子虫。
澳大利亚野生动物正日益受到威胁,两栖动物数量减少是最显著的例子之一。博物馆标本被证明对于直接支持澳大利亚本土青蛙中寄生虫出现的证据至关重要。这种寄生虫可被认为是最幸运的寄生虫之一,因为它在澳大利亚找到了一个空生态位。它现在在20多种本土和外来青蛙物种中繁衍,但它的影响尚未完全明了。