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Chytrid fungus infections in laboratory and introduced Xenopus laevis populations: assessing the risks for UK native amphibians

机译:实验室中的柠檬酸真菌感染和非洲爪蟾种群:评估英国本土两栖动物的风险

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The chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) is notorious amongst current conservation biology challenges, responsible for mass mortality and extinction of amphibian species. World trade in amphibians is implicated in global dissemination. Exports of South African Xenopus laevis have led to establishment of this invasive species on four continents. Bd naturally infects this host in Africa and now occurs in several introduced populations. However, no previous studies have investigated transfer of infection into co-occurring native amphibian faunas. A survey of 27 U.K. institutions maintaining X. laevis for research showed that most laboratories have low-level infection, a risk for native species if animals are released into the wild. RT-PCR assays showed Bd in two introduced U.K. populations of X. laevis, in Wales and Lincolnshire. Laboratory and field studies demonstrated that infection levels increase with stress, especially low temperature. In the U.K, native amphibians may be exposed to intense transmission in spring when they enter ponds to spawn alongside X. laevis that have cold-elevated Bd infections. Exposure to cross-infection has probably been recurrent since the introduction of X. laevis, >20 years in Lincolnshire and 50 years in Wales. These sites provide an important test for assessing the impact of X. laevis on Bd spread. However, RT-PCR assays on 174 native amphibians (Bufo, Rana, Lissotriton and Triturus spp.), sympatric with the Bd-infected introduced populations, showed no foci of self-sustaining Bd transmission associated with X. laevis. The abundance of these native amphibians suggested no significant negative population-level effect after the decades of co-occurrence. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
机译:在当前的保护生物学挑战中,乳糜菌臭小孢子菌(Btrachochychy dendrobatidis,Bd)是臭名昭著的,它造成了大规模死亡和两栖动物灭绝。两栖动物的世界贸易与全球传播有关。南非非洲爪蟾的出口已导致在四大洲建立这种入侵物种。 Bd在非洲自然感染了该寄主,现在已在几个引进人群中发生。但是,以前的研究都没有调查将感染转移到同时出现的两栖动物中。对英国27个维护X. laevis进行研究的机构的调查显示,大多数实验室的感染程度很低,如果将动物释放到野外,则可能会感染本地物种。 RT-PCR分析显示在威尔士和林肯郡的两个引入的英国X.laevis种群中的Bd。实验室和现场研究表明,感染水平随压力(尤其是低温)而增加。在英国,春季时,当两栖动物进入池塘并与感染了Bd的高架感染的X. laevis一起产卵时,它们可能会在春季受到强烈传播。自引入X. laevis以来,反复感染的机会可能已经反复出现,在林肯郡> 20年,在威尔士> 50年。这些站点为评估X. laevis对Bd传播的影响提供了重要的测试。但是,对与Bd感染的引入种群同胞的174种天然两栖动物(Bufo,Rana,Lissotriton和Triturus spp。)进行RT-PCR分析,没有发现与X. laevis相关的自我维持的Bd传播的病灶。这些天然的两栖动物数量很多,表明在数十年的并存之后没有显着的负面种群水平影响。 (C)2015作者。由Elsevier Ltd.发布

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