Publications by authors named "Xin-Zhou Long"

Global warming has intensified severe weather conditions and increased the frequency of wildfires, posing significant threats to ecosystems. Moreover, rice straw ash, a byproduct of human agricultural activities, represents an environmental stressor that can further impact these vulnerable ecosystems. These changes particularly impact sensitive species and microorganisms, yet limited research has explored the effects of wildfire ash and agricultural byproducts, such as rice straw ash, on amphibians.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The skin and gut microbiota are crucial to amphibians. Triadimefon (TF), a widely used triazole fungicide, controls crop diseases and regulates growth, with uncertain effects on amphibian microbiota. Contamination, typically involving mixed chemicals at low concentrations, including cadmium (Cd) and TF, may detrimentally affect amphibian growth, survival, and microbiota health in both the skin and gut, but few research has examined these consequences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Climate change is increasing wildfires, which threaten amphibian habitats and survival, but research on this connection is limited.
  • This study examined the effects of wildfire ash on the gut and skin microbiota of Rana dybowskii tadpoles over 28 days, revealing that ash concentration significantly influenced body mass, development, and survival rates.
  • The results indicated distinct changes in microbiota composition based on ash concentrations, showing that amphibians' microbiota are sensitive to environmental changes, highlighting the ecological impacts of wildfires on aquatic ecosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change and human activities escalate the frequency and intensity of wildfires, threatening amphibian habitats and survival; yet, research on these impacts remains limited. Wildfire ash alters water quality, introduces contaminants, and may disrupt microbial communities, impacting gut and skin microbiota; however, the effects on gut and skin microbiota remain unclear. Rana dybowskii were exposed to five concentrations (0 g L, 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rice straw is burned as a result of agricultural practices and technical limitations, generating significant volumes of ash that might have environmental and ecological consequences; however, the effects on organisms have not been researched. Amphibians depend on their gut and skin microbiomes. Ash exposure may cause inflammation and changes in microbial diversity and function in frogs' skin and gut microbiota due to its chemical composition and physical presence, but the implications remain unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amphibians are facing population declines and extinctions, and protecting and supplementing refuges can help species survive. However, the microhabitat requirements of most species are unknown, and artificial shelters or burrows have not been well tested for amphibians. Some amphibians exhibit complex behaviour during the transition from post-reproductive dormancy to activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF