Today, a student from out Herpetology class gave a presentation on the Chytrid Fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (B.d.), found in frogs and how it is rapidly infecting many individuals in multiple frog families. This fungus grows in the skin cells of amphibians and causes their skin to thicken. This thickening of amphibian skin doesn't permit the necessary gas exchange and ultimately causes cardiac arrest in the organism. B.d is thransfered from one individual to anther through water and also through physical contact of skin cells. This fungus is nontoxic to humans, however, posses lethal affects on the amphibians that are not immune to its' toxicity. This relatively new amphibian epidemic sparked an interest in me to find a news related article confirming the presence of this fungus in frogs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullfrog |
http://cisr.ucr.edu/chytrid_fungus.html |
This is the post this blog came from.
1 comment:
Very interesting! Bd may have originated in Africa, spread via release of Xenopus (which used to be used for pregnancy testing). Bullfrogs now appear to be playing a similar role in the global spread of Bd. Also, I think it's the bullfrogs, not the chytrid, that the ducklings have to worry about; poor ducklings!
Post a Comment