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Perspectives

Emerging Infectious Diseases and Amphibian Population Declines

Peter Daszak,* Lee Berger,†‡ Andrew A. Cunningham,§  Alex D. Hyatt,† D. Earl Green,¶ and Rick Speare‡
*Institute of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA; †Australian Animal Health Laboratory, Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organization, Geelong, Victoria, Australia; ‡School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia; §Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, London, United Kingdom; and ¶National Wildlife Health Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Madison, Wisconsin, USA


We review recent research on the pathology, ecology, and biogeography of two emerging infectious wildlife diseases, chytridiomycosis and ranaviral disease, in the context of host-parasite population biology. We examine the role of these diseases in the global decline of amphibian populations and propose hypotheses for the origins and impact of these panzootics. Finally, we discuss emerging infectious diseases as a global threat to wildlife populations.

Emerging infectious diseases have been reported increasingly as causes of death in free-living wild animals (1). These diseases are a particular threat to wildlife species whose population, habitat, or range has been diminished or artificially manipulated to promote species survival (e.g., captive breeding, translocation, and release programs) (2-4). An early example of an emerging disease panzootic was the introduction of rinderpest in African domestic cattle in 1889 (5). More recently, epizootics and panzootics of wildlife have been increasingly reported in terrestrial (1) and marine (6) habitats and are probably underreported (1,4,7-9). Recent advances in theoretical and experimental host-parasite ecology have demonstrated a major role for infectious agents in the population biology of wild animals (10,11). We discuss recent data on two newly emerging infectious diseases of amphibians and, by reference to host-parasite ecology, propose hypotheses to explain their origin and impact.

Amphibian Population Declines

Global declines in amphibian population are perhaps one of the most pressing and enigmatic environmental problems of the late 20th century (12-19). While some declines are clearly due to habitat destruction, others are not associated with obvious environmental factors. Causal hypotheses include the introduction of predators or competitors, increased ultraviolet (UV-B) irradiation, acid precipitation, adverse weather patterns, environmental pollution, infectious disease, or a combination of these. Transdermal water uptake and gaseous exchange and a biphasic life cycle are important aspects of amphibian biology. These factors led to the hypothesis that amphibians act as sentinels for global environmental degradation (12,18). However, this role has yet to be demonstrated, and many causal factors may be present (12,19,20).

Of particular concern are population declines in ecologically pristine areas, such as the montane tropical rain forests of Australia and Central America, where human impact from agriculture, deforestation, or pollution is thought to be negligible. Here, long-term data demonstrate recent and catastrophic amphibian population declines, often resulting in the complete loss of amphibian species (local extinction of multiple species) from large swaths of habitat (20-25). These declines include the disappearance and presumed extinction of the recently discovered golden toad (Bufo periglenes) of Costa Rica (23) and as many as seven Australian amphibian species, including two species of gastric-brooding frog (Rheobatrachus spp.) (20). These data, along with recent findings of amphibian mass deaths in these areas, suggest that such local extinctions are not normal population fluctuations or metapopulation dynamics.

Investigations in Australia, the United Kingdom, and North and Central America (26-31) have repeatedly found two diseases as the causes of amphibian mass deaths globally (Table 1): chytridiomycosis in the rain forests of Australia and Central and South America and some parts of North America (28-32) and iridoviral infections in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada (26,27,33-36). Both diseases have been classified as emerging (1). The parasitic infection recently implicated as the cause of amphibian deformities in North America has not been associated with mass deaths or population declines (31).

 

 

 

Table 1. Mass deaths caused by chytridiomycosis and ranaviral disease in wild populations of amphibians


 

Locality and date of mass deaths

Species affected and impacta References
 

Chytridiomycosis

E. & S. Australia

Multiple montane rain forest and temperate

28-30

 

(1993-1999)b

species. Mass deaths, local extinctions,

 
   

population declines. Near-extinction

 
   

of Taudactylus acutirostris. Hypothesized

 
   

link with global extinction of two species

 
   

of gastric brooding frog (Rheobatrachus spp.).

 
 

W. Australia

Multiple species, predominantly the western

29,31

 

(1998-1999)c

green (or motorbike) frog (Litoria moorei).

 
   

Mass deaths, population declines.

 
 

Costa Rica

Multiple montane rain forest species.

20,23,

 

and Panama

Mass deaths, local extinctions, population

28,29

 

(1994-99)

declines. Hypothesized link with global

 
   

extinction of golden toad, Bufo periglenes.

 
 

Ecuador (1999)

Montane rain forest Atelopus species, Telmatobius

29

   

niger, and Gastrothecus pseustes. Unknown impact.

 
 

Arizona

Leopard frog (Rana yavapiensis &

29

 

(1996-1997)

R. chiricahuensis). Mass deaths.

 
 

S. Arizona (1999)

Leopard frog (Rana sp.). Mass deaths.

31,32

 

Colorado (1999)

Boreal toad (Bufo boreas). Mass deaths.

d

 

Colorado (1970s)

Leopard frog (Rana pipiens). Mass deaths.

32d

 

Sierra Nevada,

Yosemite toad (Bufo canorus). Mass deaths.

32e

 

California (1970s)

   
       

Ranaviral disease

United Kingdom

Common frog (Rana temporaria). Mass deaths,

5,16,26,

 

(1992-1999f)

possibly population declines.

33,34

 

Arizona (1995)

Sonoran tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum

27

   

stebbinsi). Mass deaths in this endangered species.

 
 

N. Dakota (1998)

Tiger salamander (A. tigrinum).

35

   

Mass deaths.

 
 

Maine (1998)

Tiger salamander (A. maculatum).

35

   

Mass deaths.

 
 

Utah (1998)

Tiger salamander (A. tigrinum). Mass deaths.

35

 

Saskatchewan,

Tiger salamander (A. tigrinum diaboli). Mass deaths.

36

 

Canada (1997)

   

aMass deaths did not occur in all cases of wild amphibians infected by chytridiomycosis. Bufo americanus from Maryland and Acris crepitans from Illinois have been found infected with chytridiomycosis without observed deaths (37,38). In Australia, chytridiomycosis has been reported from small numbers of amphibians without evidence of clinical signs or deaths in both upland and lowland species (R. Speare, L. Berger, unpubl. obs.).
bRetrospective studies have identified chytridiomycosis as the cause of death in wild frogs in five Australian states from as early as 1989 (29).
c
This recent outbreak was more than 2,000 km from the closest recorded chytridiomycosis-linked amphibian die-offs (31). It is thought that chytridiomycosis may now be enzootic in many areas of Australia, but still in the process of spreading to naïve populations. A role for chytridiomycosis in other recent W. Australian declines is suspected due to similarities in the pattern of declines and presence of the Batrachochytrium carcasses from W. Australia since 1992.
dD.E. Green, unpubl. obs.
eD.E. Green, unpubl. obs. Historically collected specimens recently examined histologically revealed chytridiomycosis as a contributing factor to the cause of death in 2 of 12 animals.
f
A.A. Cunningham, unpubl. obs. 

Chytridiomycosisan Emerging Panzootic Fungal Disease of Amphibians

Figure 1
Click to view enlarged
image
Figure 1a: Ventral abdominal skin of Bufo haematiticus from western Panama. The superficial keratinized layer of epidermis (stratum corneum) contains numerous intracellular spherical-to-ovoid sporangia (spore-containing bodies) of Batrachochytrium sp......

Chytridiomycosis is a fungal disease first described in 1998 from moribund and dead adult amphibians collected at sites of mass deaths in Australia and Panama from 1993 to 1998 (28). Here, long-term ecologic study sites reported catastrophic amphibian population declines in Big Tableland, Queensland (39,40), and Fortuna and Cerro Pando, Panama (24,25,28). No significant pathogens were found on routine parasitologic, bacteriologic, mycologic, or virologic examinations of tissue samples (28). Fresh skin smears and histologic sections of the epidermis, however, consistently contained large numbers of developing and mature sporangia of a new genus of chytrid fungus (phylum Chytridiomycota) (Figures 1, 2). Sporangia were also present within the keratinized mouthparts, but not the epidermis, of sympatric tadpoles (tadpoles lack epidermal keratin) (28,29). No significant morphologic differences between chytrids infecting Australian and Central American amphibians were found by transmission electron microscopy, and the pathogen was identified as a member of the order Chytridiales by analysis of zoospore ultrastructure and 18s rDNA sequence data (28). Chytrids are ubiquitous fungi that develop without hyphae and are found in aquatic habitats and moist soil, where they degrade cellulose, chitin, and keratin (41). Parasitic chytrids mainly infect plants, algae, protists, and invertebrates (41); the amphibian pathogen is the only example of a chytrid parasitizing vertebrates (28).

Clinical signs of amphibian chytridiomycosis include abnormal posture, lethargy, and loss of righting reflex. Gross lesions, which are usually not apparent, consist of abnormal epidermal sloughing and (more rarely) epidermal ulceration; hemorrhages in the skin, muscle, or eye; hyperemia of digital and ventrum skin, and congestion of viscera (29). Diagnosis is by identification of characteristic intracellular flask-shaped sporangia and septate thalli within the epidermis (Figures 1, 2).

Its occurrence solely in keratinized tissue suggests that the chytrid uses amphibian keratin as a nutrient. A hyperkeratotic and hyperplastic response of the epidermis to infection (restricted to the stratum corneum and stratum granulosum) usually coincides with the immediate location of chytrid developmental stages. Inflammatory cell response is negligible. An isolate cultured from captive dendrobatid frogs has recently been used to fulfil Koch's postulates as a fatal pathogen of frogs and has been described as a new genus and species, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (42). Three mechanisms by which chytridiomycosis causes death have been proposed (28): 1) epidermal hyperplasia impairs essential cutaneous respiration or osmoregulation; 2) a fungal toxin is absorbed systemically (although a lack of clinical signs in infected larvae suggests otherwise); and 3) these factors are combined (28,37).
Figure 2
Click to view enlarged
image
Figure 2. Scanning electron micrograph of digital skin of a wild frog (Litoria lesueuri, from Queensland, Australia) that died of cutaneous chytridiomycosis....

Comparison of histologic, ultrastructural, and 18s rDNA sequence data indicates that the chytrids found in wild Australian (28) and captive Central American (T.Y. James, D. Porter, J.E. Longcore, pers. comm.) amphibians belong to the genus Batrachochytrium, are probably conspecific, and form a distinct monophyletic clade within the Chytridiales.

Emergence of Chytridiomycosis

Retrospective histologic surveys of museum specimens of montane, riparian anurans from protected sites in Central America and Australia, conducted 1 to 10 years before the population declines, showed no evidence of chytrid infection, which suggests that chytridiomycosis has recently emerged on two continents (28). The relatively synchronous discovery of chytridiomycosis in Australia and Central America in association with amphibian population declines is striking. The data suggest that Batrachochytrium 1) may be endemic to these regions and the amphibian deaths and declines attributed to it have only recently been discovered; 2) may be endemic and has recently become pathogenic (e.g., through an increase in the organism's prevalence or virulence, or a decrease in the host's defenses), or 3) may have been introduced recently into these geographic regions and is now parasitizing novel host species.

The pattern of amphibian deaths and population declines associated with chytridiomycosis is characteristic of an introduced virulent pathogen dispersing through a naïve population (7,10,39). In Australia, a distinct geographic and temporal progression in population declines has occurred (20), moving northward at a mean rate of 100 km per year (39). In Central America, a progression from northern Costa Rica to western Panama occurred from 1996 to 1998 (24,25). The uneven progression of declines in Australia (40) may reflect gaps in surveillance. Small-scale irregularities, however, characterize the epidemiology of many pandemics (43,44), within which individual epidemics progress at different rates in different areas. In amphibian populations, unevenness may be due to differences in ecologic factors (e.g., population density, habitat, age structure); differences among pathogen strains; stochastic factors, such as the time of introduction; or a combination of these factors. In Australia and Central America, population declines have been catastrophic, occurring over a few months, with dramatic population loss and high rates of adult deaths (20,24,25,28,39,40,45). Such high depopulation rates are characteristic of introduced virulent pathogens (10). Conversely, in coevolved host-pathogen relationships, a degree of herd immunity to the pathogen and lower virulence (infectivity and death rates) are normally observed. The low host specificity of amphibian chytridiomycosis (more than 30 species of wild amphibians from seven families in Central America and Australia [28,29]) also suggests that the disease was not enzootic in those montane rain-forest populations. Ability to infect a range of host species is a characteristic of many invading pathogens (10) and is less common in endemic microparasites that have coevolved with their hosts.

The most parsimonious hypothesis for the origin of chytridiomycosis panzootics in Australia and Central America is the introduction of disease into populations of previously unexposed amphibians. Introduction of pathogens, termed pathogen pollution (1), is increasingly recognized as a significant threat to global biodiversity (1,6,46) and forms an integral part of human history (10,47). There are precedents for the introduction of fungal pathogens (including chytrid parasites) that cause high death rates (41,48). Mechanisms by which wildlife pathogens can be introduced are common; for example, a consequence of the increasing mobility of humans is the global translocation of wildlife, plants, soil, and ballast water (1,4,49,50). Freshwater fish and amphibians are also transported globally. In Australia, chytridiomycosis-infected cane toads (Bufo marinus), a recently introduced species, have been found (29), and in North America, bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana) and other species of amphibians have been translocated or introduced widely. Some authors have suggested that tourists or fieldworkers surveying amphibian populations may have facilitated the dissemination of Batrachochytrium (19), although this has not been demonstrated. Batrachochytrium may have coevolved with some amphibians (e.g., lowland) species, populations of which remain unaffected. Recent disturbances of rain forest habitats may have introduced this parasite into naïve populations in Central America and Australia, leading to mass deaths. This range of disease outcomes parallels many diseases of humans, e.g., measles and smallpox, which produce a range of effects on persons in disease-endemic regions and cause massive deaths when introduced into naïve populations (48).

The occurrence of chytridiomycosis in free-living North American amphibians (Table 1) suggests a less obvious pattern of dissemination than in Central America and Australia. This irregularity may be due to a paucity of data, the pathogen's being enzootic to the United States, or the pathogen's introduction a number of years before. Historical reports of declines in the United States include postmetamorphic death syndrome, which progressed in waves through populations of amphibians, causing 90% to 100% death rates in recently metamorphosed animals and low death rates in larvae (50). Recent reports of chytridiomycosis-linked die-offs in Bufo boreas markedly resemble these previous die-offs. This observation and the finding that chytridiomycosis caused similar die-offs (of B. canorus and R. pipiens) in the 1970s (Table 1) (32), support the last of the above hypotheses. In the United States an amphibian pathogen (histologically very similar to Batrachochytrium but identified as Basidiobolus ranarum) has been described in wild Wyoming toads (Bufo hemiophrys baxteri) (51) and captive dwarf African clawed frogs (Hymenochirus curtipes) (52). As the latter species was widely introduced in ornamental garden ponds throughout the United States in the late 1980s, it may be involved in the dissemination of Batrachochytrium.

Chytridiomycosis as the Cause of Population Declines

The ability of a pathogen to cause local population declines resulting in local host extinction requires a mechanism of persistence at low host densities. In epidemiologic models, highly virulent parasites rapidly suppress the host population density below a threshold value required to maintain transmission, resulting in the pathogen's extinction and recovery of the host population (7,10). Microparasites such as Batrachochytrium, with their relatively short duration of infection and high death rates, have an increased threshold population density and are usually less able to persist. Many parasites have evolved life history strategies for persistence (10) and the presence of reservoir hosts may augment the impact of other introduced wildlife diseases on host populations (46). The aclinical presence of Batrachochytrium in the keratinized mouthparts of amphibian larvae implicates this life-cycle stage as a reservoir host for the pathogen. This form of infection may enable Batrachochytrium to persist in reduced amphibian populations (Figure 3). In both Australia and Central America, chytrid infection was observed in larval mouthparts months after initial adult deaths: the larvae of many tropical amphibian species survive 12 to 18 monthsand some temperate species as long as 3 yearsbefore metamorphosing. Examples of larval infection enhancing pathogen-mediated population declines and leading to host population extinctions have been reported for invertebrates (53).
Figure 3
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image
Figure 3. Diagrammatic representation of the range of disease outcomes in populations of amphibians affected by a Batrachochytrium-like pathogen.....

Persistence may be further enhanced by saprophytic development (Figure 3). Batrachochytrium can be cultured in vitro on tryptone agar without the addition of keratin or its derivatives (37,42), and it will grow for at least one generation on cleaned epidermal keratin or on amphibians that have died of the infection (42). Batrachochytrium may survive and reproduce as a saprophytic organism in the environment, at least for short periods. Keratin (from decaying carcasses, shed skin, and other sources) is widely distributed in the environment, and chytrids that use this substrate are well known (42). Furthermore, the ability to develop and reproduce saprophytically is common to many other fungal (54) (including chytrid [41]) and bacterial (55) pathogens. An epidemiologic model of a host-parasite system for pathogens that can reproduce saprophytically clearly shows a lowering of the host threshold population, allowing the pathogen to drive the host to extinction (55). Development of Batrachochytrium for even short periods outside its amphibian host may greatly increase its impact and accelerate population declines. Long-term presence as a saprophyte may explain the lack of recolonization of streams from which amphibians have been extirpated in both Australia (29) and Central America (24,25).

The impact of chytridiomycosis may be enhanced by the ecologic characteristics of certain host species. In Australia, chytridiomycosis-linked deaths have occurred in both declining and nondeclining species (28,29). Species with declining populations belong to a similar ecologic guild: regionally endemic rain forest specialists with low fecundity that reproduce in streams and live at high altitudes (22). These characteristics, which are largely shared by declining Central American amphibians (24,25), are predictors of increased impact from chytridiomycosis. Species that reproduce in streams are probably more susceptible to a waterborne pathogen than terrestrial breeders. Low fecundity (56) and habitat specialization indicate a reduced ability to recover from population declines caused by stochastic events, including disease introduction. Laurance, McDonald, and Speare (39) suggested that the relation between high-altitude populations and declines may be due to a pathogen with a lower preferred developmental temperature. Preliminary data on cultured Batrachochytrium are consistent with this hypothesis: it develops most rapidly at 23oC in culture, with slower growth at 28oC and reversible cessation of growth at 29oC (42). The growth rate of Batrachochytrium in the skin (and therefore virulence) and the survival of zoospores outside the host (and therefore transmission rate) are likely to be lower in amphibians from the warmer lowland regions. The ability of the pathogen to survive saprophytically in the environment and for the disease to persist may also be enhanced in the cooler montane regions. These laboratory data may explain why chytridiomycosis has been associated with population declines in North American amphibians in montane localities (31,32) and after periods of cool weather at many U.S. and Australian sites (29,31).

Potential Environmental Cofactors in the Emergence of Chytridiomycosis

Multiple factors (host, pathogen, environmental) may be involved in chytridiomycosis emergence. Some authors have hypothesized that infectious disease is only the proximate cause of declines and that environmental factors such as increased UV-B, chemical pollution, climate change, or stress may have predisposed amphibian populations to opportunistic pathogens (13,32,57). Recent work at Monteverde, Costa Rica, suggests that atmospheric warming, with a resultant elevation of the average altitude of the base of the orographic cloud bank and an increase in dry periods, is causally linked to amphibian declines at this site (57). Although no pathologic studies of amphibians were undertaken, overcrowding during periods of drought may have allowed chytridiomycosis to cause substantial deaths (57). Further work is required to test this hypothesis, since a drier climate would also predict a lower overall impact from chytridiomycosisa disease transmitted by flagellated, waterborne zoospores. The evidence suggests that cofactors are not required for chytridiomycosis to cause amphibian mass deaths. Chytridiomycosis is highly pathogenic to captive-bred amphibians exposed in captivity where control animals remained healthy (28,42). Further experimental infections using extremely small inocula (100 zoospores) also proved fatal (29).

 
Figure 4
Click to view enlarged
image
Figure 4. Transmission electron micrographs of iridovirus cultured from the liver of a naturally diseased common frog (Rana temporaria) by using a fathead minnow epithelial cell line. 4a. 

Some deaths among wild amphibians have been attributed to immunosuppression, predisposing them to infectious disease (13,32). In the chytridiomycosis-related deaths, chytridiomycosis was consistently found as the cause of death, and the range of opportunistic infections expected to occur in immunocompromised animals was not found (28,29). An increase in UV-B irradiation may influence amphibian declines (58), but in the subtropical regions of Australia and Central America, data demonstrate no significant increase in UV irradiation (29,59). Even so, the potentional effect of increased irradiation on montane riparian rain forest amphibians is uncertain, since these animals lay eggs under rocks or in sand banks and adults are rarely exposed to direct sunlight (24,29). Furthermore, in these regions, the species most likely to be affected by UV increases (arboreal amphibians, which bask or lay exposed eggs) are not in decline (20). Despite extensive research, chemical pollution (20,25), habitat destruction (22), or climate change (57) have not, so far, been causally linked either to the Australian declines or to those at Central American sites other than Monteverde. No other possible cofactors, such as sympatric pathogens, have been found.

Emerging Viral Diseases of Amphibians

Iridoviruses have been implicated as the cause of amphibian mass deaths worldwide, with novel iridoviruses of amphibians recently identified from a number of regions (Tables 1, 2). The Iridoviridae encompass five recognized genera: Iridovirus, Chloriridovirus, Ranavirus, Lymphocystivirus, and goldfish virus 1-like viruses (71). Of these, the genus Ranavirus contains pathogens of fish, amphibians, and reptiles (Table 2; Figure 4).

 

Table 2. Iridovirusesa,b of herpetofauna (34)


Host  Virusc

Country or region where isolated

 

Ref.


Amphibian iridoviruses

Frog virus 3

North America, United States

60

Leopard frog (Rana pipiens)

considered type for

   
 

sympatric isolates frog

   
 

virus 1, 2, 9-23

   

Red-spotted new eft

T6-20

North America, United States

61

(Notophthalamus viridescens)

     

Bullfrog

Tadpole edema virus

North America, United States

62

(Rana catesbeiana)

     

Edible frog (Rana esculenta)

Rana esculenta iridovirus

Europe (Croatia)

63

Ornate burrowing frog

Bohle iridovirus

Australia

64

(Limnodynastes ornatus)

     

Cane toad (Bufo marinus)

Gutapo iridovirus

South America (Venezuela)

65

Common frog

Rana UK virus

Europe, United Kingdom

33

(Rana temporaria)

     

Common toad (Bufo bufo)

Bufo UK virus

Europe, United Kingdom

34

Red-legged frog larvae

Redwood Creek virus

California, United States

66,67

(Rana aurora)

     

Tiger salamander (Ambystoma

A. tigrinum virus

Arizona, United States

27

tigrinum stebbinsi)

     

Tiger salamander (A. t.

Regina ranavirus

Saskatchewan, Canada

36

mavortium)

     

Ranid frog (Rana grylio)

Rana grylio virus

China

68

Tiger salamander

Not yet named

N. Dakota, United States

35

(A. tigrinum)

     

Spotted salamander

Not yet named

Maine, United States

35

(A. maculatum)

     

Tiger salamander

Not yet named

Utah, United States

35

(A. tigrinum)

     
       

Reptile iridoviruses

     

Box turtle (Terrapene c.

Turtle virus 3

Maryland, United States

69

carolina)

     

Central Asian tortoise

Tortoise virus 5

North America, United States

69

(Testudo horsfieldi)

     

Soft-shelled turtle

 

China

70

(Trionyx sinensis)

     

Green tree python

Wamen virus

Australia

A.D.

(Chondropython viridis)

   

Hyatt

     

(unpubl.

     

obs.)

Gopher tortoise

 

North America, United States

69

(Gopherus polyphemus)

     

aErythrocytic viruses, which are antigenically unrelated to ranaviruses and are not associated with amphibian mass deaths or declines, are not included. Further work is required to evaluate their significance. 
b
There is little variation in the major capsid protein (a major antigen of this group of viruses) within the genus Ranavirus (<4% difference at the nucleotide and amino acid level; Hyatt, unpubl. obs). This high degree of homology is interesting, as some of these viruses do not appear to be species specific. No discriminating neutralizing antibodies exist, and ranaviruses are identified and characterized by a range of techniques, including antigen capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, restriction endonuclease digestion, polymerase chain reaction, and sequencing and in situ hybridization (67,71).
c
Where no name has been given, the virus has not yet been named. 

Characteristics of Ranaviral Disease

Ranaviruses are often highly virulent and cause systemic infections in amphibians. Experiments with Bohle iridovirus and Gutapo virus suggest that tadpoles are the most susceptible developmental stage for ranavirus infection, and death rates of 100% occur (72). Infected metamorphs die without overt signs of infection, and infected adults show either no overt signs or, occasionally, a general weakness. Histologically, acute necrosis of hematopoietic and lymphoid tissues and of leukocytes occurs in most organs of infected animals (72). Epizootiologic data on tadpole edema virus infections of North American amphibians are scanty, although the virus was isolated mostly from diseased animals (60-62). Experimental infections show that bullfrog (R. catesbeiana) tadpoles infected with tadpole edema virus develop an acute lethal disease after a short incubation. The virus invades the liver, kidneys, and digestive tract and causes hemorrhage in skeletal tissue, pathologic findings similar to those described in B. marinus infected with the ranaviruses frog virus 3, Bohle iridovirus, or Gutapo virus (72). Tadpole edema virus was uniformly lethal to three species of experimentally infected North American toad (61,62). Experimental inoculation with tadpole edema virus caused high rates of deaths in toads (100%, 4 to 17 days postinfection in young and adult Bufo sp. and newly metamorphosed Scaphiopus sp.), 40% death rates in metamorphosing bullfrogs (R. catesbeiana), and no deaths in newly hatched salamanders (Ambystoma sp.). For the last two species, the low virulence suggests either some prior exposure and acquired immunity or a degree of innate resistance.

Pathologic data from ranaviral infections in wild amphibians may be complicated by secondary bacterial infection. Cunningham et al. (26) described two syndromes in Rana temporaria collected at sites of mass deaths in the United Kingdom: a hemorrhagic syndrome affecting the skeletal musculature and the alimentary and reproductive tracts and an ulcerative skin syndrome with dermal ulceration and often necrosis of the distal limbs, but without hemorrhage in the muscles or viscera. In some areas, frogs were found with lesions common to both syndromes (26). These lesions are characteristic of red-leg, a syndrome thought to be caused by bacterial infection; however, Cunningham et al. (26) concluded that the lesions they described were caused by primary iridoviral infection, with or without secondary bacterial infection. Secondary bacterial infection was also reported in wild-collected, diseased A. t. stebbinsi infected with Ambystoma tigrinum virus (27). This infection resulted in rapid onset (5 to 7 days) of apparent epidermal hyperplasia, then dermal hemorrhage, followed by visceral hemorrhage and death rates of up to 45% (27).

Factors Associated with the Emergence of Ranaviruses

The epizootiology of ranaviral disease in amphibians is poorly understood. Data from closely related ranaviral infections of fish, however, suggest a number of factors which may explain their recent emergence. Epizootic hematopoietic necrosis virus is a ranaviral pathogen of fish and the causative agent of epizootic hematopoietic necrosis, a notifiable disease under the Office Internationale des Epizooties (73,74). Sequencing data suggest that this disease is unique among the ranaviruses, is probably indigenous to Australia, and has a wide geographic range. Dissemination may be partly due to the virus's ability to remain infectious under adverse conditions and for prolonged periods (Table 3).

 

Table 3. Longevity of infectious epizootic hematopoietic necrosis virus (72,74,75


Treatment

Survival time (days)

Ref.

Animal tissues

   

-20oC

>730

75

-70oC

>730

75

In solution

   

Distilled water

97

75

(temperature not specified)

   

4oC, cell

>1124

74

maintenance media

   

-20oC, cell

>1124

74

maintenance media

   

-70oC, cell

>1124

74

maintenance media

   

On dry surfaces

>113, <200

75


The resistant nature of epizootic hematopoietic necrosis virus suggests that amphibian iridoviruses may survive long periods at the bottom of ponds, particularly during winter. Jancovich et al. (27) demonstrated that water containing Ambystoma tigrinum virus-infected Ambystoma became uninfective after 2 weeks at 25oC, and and epizootics of Ambystoma tigrinum virus and regina ranavirus often followed periods of cold weather (27,36). Epizootic hematopoietic necrosis virus may be spread by fomites such as fishing nets, boats, and fishing rods and through artificial stocking of ponds for recreational fishing (76). Birds have the potential to mechanically transfer virus on their feathers, feet, or bills, or by regurgitation of ingested infected material (76). Similar modes of spread are likely to occur with the amphibian ranaviruses. The occurrence of epizootic hematopoietic necrosis may be correlated with poor husbandry, including overcrowding, inadequate water flow, and fouling of local environments with feed from fish farms (77).

Recent movements of amphibians may have disseminated ranaviral diseases. The North American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana), the host of tadpole edema virus, has been widely introduced in the western United States and South America. In the United Kingdom, ranaviruses may be disseminated by the common practice of translocation of amphibian egg masses and larvae by humans. Zupanovic et al. (65,78) reported the existence of ranaviruses and antibodies to ranaviruses in the cane toad (Bufo marinus) in Venezuela. In Australia, where B. marinus was introduced to Queensland in 1935, ranaviral antibodies can be identified in this species throughout its range (78). The range of B. marinus has expanded rapidly in Australia, and the toad threatens environmentally sensitive wetlands in the Kakadu National Park. The effects of toxicity, predation, and competition of this relentlessly expanding species are well documented, and its potential to disseminate novel viral pathogens to native amphibians should also be considered in evaluating its ecologic impact. So far, a ranavirus (Bohle iridovirus) has been isolated from only one native Australian amphibian, the ornate burrowing frog (Limnodynastes ornatus) (79).

Experimental infection with Bohle iridovirus causes illness and death in a range of frogs and toads, fish, and reptiles (L. Owens, pers. comm.) (80,81). Gutapo virus, isolated from Venezuelan B. marinus (65), is also able to infect other amphibian species (72). Despite Bohle iridovirus' low host specificity, current levels of surveillance have not implicated it in diseases of free-ranging Australian animals other than those from which it was originally isolated. The ability of Bohle iridovirus to infect fish implicates the widespread introduction of fish for recreational purposes as a potentially significant factor in the dissemination of amphibian ranaviruses. Similarly, Redwood Creek virus, a ranavirus found to cause death of the endangered red-legged frog (67), can infect both amphibians and fish.

Impact of Ranaviral Disease

on Amphibian Populations

The link between amphibian population declines and ranaviral disease is less clear than that with chytridiomycosis. However, these highly virulent ranaviruses are a potential threat to amphibian populations, especially populations isolated from previous disease outbreaks (and thus lacking specific immunity) and species with low fecundity. In particular, the high death rates of tadpoles infected by ranaviruses predict a negative impact on populations. Using the model of Lampo and De Leo (82), a tadpole death rate of 80% to 90% would remove 80% to 90% of the animals that would otherwise survive metamorphosis, resulting in an approximately 80% reduction in adult populations (Lampo, pers. comm.). Although such an epizootic might not endanger the long-term survival of a highly adaptable, highly fecund species such as B. marinus, species that inhabit specialized ecologic niches or have low fecundity might be adversely affected.

Recent outbreaks of iridoviral disease have been particularly notable in Rana temporaria (United Kingdom) and Ambystoma tigrinum (Arizona, Saskatchewan). These outbreaks involved of extensive deaths and the annual recurrence of the diseases. Common ecologic themes occur for these amphibian populations. The natural habitat of A. t. stebbinsi has been entirely destroyed by drainage after human colonization of the southwestern United States, and relict populations are now confined to manmade watering holes for cattle. Other outbreaks of ranaviral disease in A. tigrinum have been associated with altered habitats and artificial ponds. Similar habitat destruction has occurred in the United Kingdom, where most outbreaks of iridovirus infection are reported from artificial ponds (16). High population densities of frogs (16) and salamanders (27) occur in these bodies of water, facilitating the transmission of viruses and predisposing the amphibian populations to mass deaths.

Implications of Emerging Infectious Diseases for Amphibian Population Declines and Wildlife Conservation

The geographic spread of chytridiomycosis threatens populations of endemic and endangered amphibians in rain forests of Australia and Central and South America. Chytridiomycosis has now been reported from 38 amphibian species in 12 families, including ranid and hylid frogs, bufonid toads, and plethodontid salamanders (28,32,37,38,42,83). Although many of these records are from captive animals, the data demonstrate that chytridiomycosis is fatal to species originating from Europe, Africa, Madagascar, the Americas, and Oceania and attest to its potential impact should the disease be introduced into these areas. The emergence of amphibian ranaviruses raises similar concerns. Their ability to infect a wide range of amphibian and fish hosts (different vertebrate classes), global distribution, and high virulence clearly establish them as a global threat to amphibian populations. Despite the recent geographic spread and impact of chytrids and ranaviruses, these diseases probably do not account for all the reports of declining amphibian populations, and evidence exists for other causal factors, such as habitat loss (12). Although chytridiomycosis causes high death rates in a range of species and habitats, it has caused population declines of amphibians only in certain species confined to montane rain forests, while the emergence of ranaviral disease seems to be associated with disturbed or degraded habitats.

Hypotheses regarding the origins and impact of emerging infectious diseases on amphibians are being tested. A number of Batrachochytrium and iridovirus isolates have been cultured, and analysis of their phylogenetic and pathologic features in natural and experimental infections, as well as their biologic characteristics (e.g., ability to survive in the environment, evolution of virulent strains) has already begun. Basic host and parasite ecologic data, such as prevalence and duration of infection and presence of reservoir hosts, are being collected. Data from these studies may enable the formulation of management plans to limit the diseases' impact. Development of chemotherapeutic regimens and diagnostic tests (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, in situ hybridization) may enable rapid progress toward these goals (29). National and international structures for the rapid dissemination of information between scientists, politicians, and the public may be crucial in combating the threat of these globally emergent pathogens. However, large geographic areas (e.g., Africa and much of Asia) have not yet been surveyed for declining amphibian populations or for the occurrence of these pathogens. Raising awareness of this threat should be one of the highest priorities for the immediate future.

Many introduced pathogens have affected human populations (10,47). However, far fewer studies of introduced diseases among wildlife have been published, and usually only those producing obvious population losses are studied vigorously (1-6).

The loss of amphibian populations to the point of local extinction is a striking effect of chytridiomycosis in Australia and Central America. However, the effects of introduced wildlife diseases may be more far-reaching and subtle, with knock-on (ripple) effects permeating throughout the ecosystem (1,2,7,82,84). In many tropical and some temperate areas, amphibians make up a significant proportionsometimes mostof these vertebrate biomass (85), and their loss is likely to have unpredictable effects on populations of other species. For example, loss of herbivorous amphibian larvae may cause an overgrowth of algae in montane tropical streams, with further knock-on effects. In Australia and Central America, certain species of snakes prey exclusively on amphibians and are likely to suffer significant population declines, in the same way that the red fox population was drastically reduced in the United Kingdom after the introduction of myxomatosis (10). Such insidious effects following disease introduction and an underestimation of their historical incidence suggest that this pathogen pollution may be as serious a conservation threat as habitat destruction and chemical pollution (1).

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Trent K. Bollinger, Cynthia Carey, V. Greg Chinchar, Doug Docherty, Timothy Y. James, M. Lampo, Karen Lips, Joyce E. Longcore, Don K. Nichols, David Porter, L. Owens, and Allan P. Pessier for access to unpublished data and papers in press. and Mark A. Farmer, and David Porter, University of Georgia and members of the Infectious Diseases Pathology Activity, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for their hospitality.

Dr. Daszak is a parasitologist at the Institute of Ecology, University of Georgia, Georgia, USA, investigating amphibian chytridiomycosis and other emerging pathogens of wildlife. He is interested in the pathology, cell biology, and host-parasite ecology of emerging diseases of wildlife.

Address for correspondence: Peter Daszak, Institute of Ecology, University of Georgia, Ecology Building, Athens, GA 30602, USA; fax: 706-542-4819; e-mail: daszak@arches.uga.edu.

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