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Development and worldwide use of a non-lethal and minimal population-level impact protocols for the isolation of chytrids from amphibians

Authors :
Frances C. Clare
Mario Alvarado-Rybak
Matthew C. Fisher
Andrew A. Cunningham
Thomas S. Jenkinson
Dirk S. Schmeller
Timothy Y. James
Fikirte Gebresenbet
Claude Miaud
Pete Minting
Tsanta Rakotonanahary
Lee F. Skerratt
Rhys A. Farrer
Luisa P. Ribeiro
Sara Meurling
Carolina Lambertini
Jacob Höglund
Tiffany A. Kosch
Judit Vörös
Trenton W. J. Garner
Rebecca J. Webb
Elodie A. Courtois
Frank Pasmans
Angelica Crottini
Adeline Loyau
Jaime Bosch
Giulia Tessa
David M. Aanensen
Pria Ghosh
David J. Gower
Arnaud Bataille
Luís Felipe Toledo
Lee Berger
Kieran A. Bates
Jennifer M. G. Shelton
Gonçalo M. Rosa
Freya Smith
Falitiana C. E. Rabemananjara
Andrés Valenzuela-Sánchez
Claudia Wierzbicki
Serge Herilala Ndriantsoa
Lola Brookes
Chun-Fu Lin
Ruhan Verster
An Martel
Emma Wombwell
Benedikt R. Schmidt
Ché Weldon
Joyce E. Longcore
Anssi Laurila
Thomas M. Doherty-Bone
Bruce Waldman
Kelly R. Zamudio
Luisa Ribeiro
Claudio Soto-Azat
Susanne Boell
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Parasitic chytrid fungi have emerged as a significant threat to amphibian species worldwide, necessitating the development of techniques to isolate these pathogens into sterile culture for research purposes. However, early methods of isolating chytrids from their hosts relied on killing amphibians. We modified a pre-existing protocol for isolating chytrids from infected animals to use toe clips and biopsies from toe webbing rather than euthanizing hosts, and distributed the protocol to interested researchers worldwide as part of the BiodivERsA project RACE – here called the RML protocol. In tandem, we developed a lethal procedure for isolating chytrids from tadpole mouthparts. Reviewing a database of use a decade after their inception, we find that these methods have been widely applied across at least 5 continents, 23 countries and in 62 amphibian species, and have been successfully used to isolate chytrids in remote field locations. Isolation of chytrids by the non-lethal RML protocol occured in 18% of attempts with 207 fungal isolates and three species of chytrid being recovered. Isolation of chytrids from tadpoles occured in 43% of attempts with 334 fungal isolates of one species (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) being recovered. Together, these methods have resulted in a significant reduction and refinement of our use of threatened amphibian species and have improved our ability to work with this important group of emerging fungal pathogens.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c0ba7d2493cc37c7b2c1e75a53b6271
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/246538