Frog Tadpoles In 5 Countries Infected With Protist Disease

HomeBig BoxesNews RSS Feed

Frog Tadpoles In 5 Countries Infected With Protist Disease

The parasitic disease is a single-celled microbe related to oyster parasites.

ANA TO Fly Green Sea Turtle Themed Airplane
Tortoise Serves As Therapy Pet At Senior Care Facility
Wood Turtles Need Endangered Species Protections, Lawsuit Says

Chytrid fungus has been decimating amphibian populations around the world for years, and now a new disease completely unrelated to chytrid, has been found in tadpoles in five countries and it is highly infectious. The parasitic disease is a single-celled microbe that the scientists call Perkinsea-like protists. It is a distant relative of oyster parasites. 


More Frog Disease Information

Mass Die Off of Wood Frog Tadpoles Concerns Scientist

Advertisement

Frogs Can Resist Chytrid Fungus

How to Recognize and Prevent Medical Ailments in Amphibians


protists in tadpole liver

Photo by Michael J. Yabsley, University of Georgia

This image is of a tadpole liver magnified 100 times. The dots are the protist parasites that have been stained purple. The tadpole was part of a mass die-off in 2006.

Advertisement

The protists have been linked to a mass die off of tadpoles in a lake in Georgia back in 2006, and they attribute it to several outbreaks in the eastern United States in the last several years. 

They analyzed the microbe and determined that it was related to Perkinsus sp. a marine protist that has devastated commercial shellfish populations. They then tested for Perkinsea-like lineages in the livers of 182 tadpoles
from different frog families and found that the microbe was present in 38 tadpoles from 14 genera/phylogroups from five countries across three continents. 

The scientists now need to determine if the protists cause significant disease in the amphibians and if they are contributing to the decline of frog species around the world.

Here is a link to the  complete paper, Cryptic infection of a broad taxonomic and geographic
diversity of tadpoles by Perkinsea protists
.

Advertisement