AI Article Synopsis

  • * While much focus has been on aquatic-breeding frogs suffering declines due to Bd, cryptic terrestrial-breeding amphibians like the pumpkin toadlet have also experienced significant declines in tropical regions.
  • * Experiments revealed that Bd can spill over from mildly infected aquatic frogs to terrestrial-breeding toadlets, causing lethal infections and harmful changes in their skin bacterial communities, highlighting the need to investigate the declines of these terrestrial species further.

Article Abstract

Wildlife disease dynamics are strongly influenced by the structure of host communities and their symbiotic microbiota. Conspicuous amphibian declines associated with the waterborne fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) have been observed in aquatic-breeding frogs globally. However, less attention has been given to cryptic terrestrial-breeding amphibians that have also been declining in tropical regions. By experimentally manipulating multiple tropical amphibian assemblages harbouring natural microbial communities, we tested whether Bd spillover from naturally infected aquatic-breeding frogs could lead to Bd amplification and mortality in our focal terrestrial-breeding host: the pumpkin toadlet Brachycephalus pitanga. We also tested whether the strength of spillover could vary depending on skin bacterial transmission within host assemblages. Terrestrial-breeding toadlets acquired lethal spillover infections from neighbouring aquatic hosts and experienced dramatic but generally non-protective shifts in skin bacterial composition primarily attributable to their Bd infections. By contrast, aquatic-breeding amphibians maintained mild Bd infections and higher survival, with shifts in bacterial microbiomes that were unrelated to Bd infections. Our results indicate that Bd spillover from even mildly infected aquatic-breeding hosts may lead to dysbiosis and mortality in terrestrial-breeding species, underscoring the need to further investigate recent population declines of terrestrial-breeding amphibians in the tropics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6710587PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.1114DOI Listing

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