Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications

Spread of the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) poses the greatest emerging threat to global amphibian biodiversity. Bd's low host species specificity allows the disease it causes — chytridiomycosis — to affect many of the 7,000 species of amphibians and drive populat...

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Main Author: Kolby, Jonathan E.
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/1/52649-kolby-2016-thesis.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:52649 2023-09-05T13:15:16+02:00 Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications Kolby, Jonathan E. 2016 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/1/52649-kolby-2016-thesis.pdf unknown http://dx.doi.org/10.4225/28/5a8e4eaa8409f https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/1/52649-kolby-2016-thesis.pdf Kolby, Jonathan E. (2016) Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications. PhD thesis, James Cook University. open Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2016 ftjamescook https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a8e4eaa8409f 2023-08-22T20:23:21Z Spread of the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) poses the greatest emerging threat to global amphibian biodiversity. Bd's low host species specificity allows the disease it causes — chytridiomycosis — to affect many of the 7,000 species of amphibians and drive population declines and extinctions worldwide. Although discovered nearly 20 years ago, the origin of Bd and catalyst of the seemingly recent global disease event remain obscure. Today, this international epizootic continues to advance virtually uncontrolled. Modes of global Bd dispersal are not well understood, hampering the development and implementation of targeted biosecurity efforts to reduce spread. Bd is an aquatic pathogen most often associated with amphibian species that live in or near permanent bodies of water. It can neither survive desiccation nor extended exposure to elevated temperatures, but few environmental barriers appear to impede the spread of Bd. It has crossed oceans, infected terrestrial direct-developing amphibians that do not live in water, and been introduced to every continent (except Antarctica). Although low densities of Bd have been found in the environment outside of a host, amphibians consistently carry the highest pathogen loads and appear to be the primary host organisms that vector Bd. The international trade in live amphibians transports millions of animals annually. Most previous research has focused on this anthropogenic activity as the primary pathway of global Bd dispersal. This is a sensible assumption—the highly visible movement of Bd hosts together with the lack of disease control suggests that Bd-positive animals are commonly transported in these shipments. Unfortunately, all previous surveillance efforts that aimed to demonstrate this phenomenon were performed in animal markets in Bd-positive countries where contamination from domestic Bd could not be excluded as a potential source of infection. Upon close examination of global Bd distribution patterns, I found that regions of Bd ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctica James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
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collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
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description Spread of the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) poses the greatest emerging threat to global amphibian biodiversity. Bd's low host species specificity allows the disease it causes — chytridiomycosis — to affect many of the 7,000 species of amphibians and drive population declines and extinctions worldwide. Although discovered nearly 20 years ago, the origin of Bd and catalyst of the seemingly recent global disease event remain obscure. Today, this international epizootic continues to advance virtually uncontrolled. Modes of global Bd dispersal are not well understood, hampering the development and implementation of targeted biosecurity efforts to reduce spread. Bd is an aquatic pathogen most often associated with amphibian species that live in or near permanent bodies of water. It can neither survive desiccation nor extended exposure to elevated temperatures, but few environmental barriers appear to impede the spread of Bd. It has crossed oceans, infected terrestrial direct-developing amphibians that do not live in water, and been introduced to every continent (except Antarctica). Although low densities of Bd have been found in the environment outside of a host, amphibians consistently carry the highest pathogen loads and appear to be the primary host organisms that vector Bd. The international trade in live amphibians transports millions of animals annually. Most previous research has focused on this anthropogenic activity as the primary pathway of global Bd dispersal. This is a sensible assumption—the highly visible movement of Bd hosts together with the lack of disease control suggests that Bd-positive animals are commonly transported in these shipments. Unfortunately, all previous surveillance efforts that aimed to demonstrate this phenomenon were performed in animal markets in Bd-positive countries where contamination from domestic Bd could not be excluded as a potential source of infection. Upon close examination of global Bd distribution patterns, I found that regions of Bd ...
format Thesis
author Kolby, Jonathan E.
spellingShingle Kolby, Jonathan E.
Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
author_facet Kolby, Jonathan E.
author_sort Kolby, Jonathan E.
title Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
title_short Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
title_full Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
title_fullStr Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
title_full_unstemmed Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
title_sort pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications
publishDate 2016
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/1/52649-kolby-2016-thesis.pdf
genre Antarc*
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genre_facet Antarc*
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op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.4225/28/5a8e4eaa8409f
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/52649/1/52649-kolby-2016-thesis.pdf
Kolby, Jonathan E. (2016) Pathways of amphibian chytrid fungus dispersal: global biosecurity and conservation implications. PhD thesis, James Cook University.
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a8e4eaa8409f
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