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USGS Diagnoses Causes of Many U.S. Amphibian Die-Offs
Released: 8/8/2000

Contact Information:
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
Office of Communication
119 National Center
Reston, VA 20192
Paul Slota 1-click interview
Phone: 608-270-2420

D. Earl Green
Phone: (608) 270-2482

Catherine Haecker
Phone: 707-442-1329


Note To News Editors: For reproducible pictures, go to URL: http://www.usgs.gov/amphibian_images.html
For more information on amphibian issues, go to: http://www.frogweb.gov/tadd/publications.html

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientists are making headway in unraveling clues to the causes of massive die-offs of frogs and other amphibians. The agency announced today that a little-understood, emerging iridovirus disease associated with large die-offs of frogs and salamanders in the Midwest and the East has caused another recent die-off, in North Dakota.

USGS wildlife pathologist D. Earl Green said an iridovirus infection is the culprit in most of the deaths of U.S. western tiger salamanders at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Cottonwood Lake Study Area near Jamestown, North Dakota.

Wildlife health scientists at the USGS National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wisconsin, also are investigating numerous other amphibian die-offs that recently occurred or are continuing to occur in several locations across the United States. The die-offs, which involve multiple species of frogs, toads, salamanders and one species of newt, are occurring on private, state, and federal lands including several national parks.

"The U.S. Geological Survey is leading the government’s efforts to help determine why amphibians are disappearing," said Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt. "This is a crisis that has attracted worldwide concern. It requires timely, aggressive research. It is no exaggeration to say that USGS research on these die-offs has global implications."

Whether some of the ongoing die-offs are related to recent local or regional amphibian declines across the United States, or are sustained, long-term events only recently discovered, is still unknown. The wide geographic distribution of these mortality events and the number of species involved may represent an entirely new phenomenon or may be partly the result of increased surveillance of amphibian populations. Amphibian researchers and land managers worldwide, however, are concerned about the often severe and mostly unexplained declines of amphibian populations on many continents, including in remote and pristine areas.

Research by USGS and other scientists has identified many deadly virus infections and chytrid fungus as causes of some recent amphibian die-offs and local population declines. Scientists are actively investigating other hypotheses that could help explain these worldwide declines, including increased exposure to ultraviolet radiation due to ozone thinning, the spread of non-native predators, contamination from pesticides and other chemicals, and rising temperatures. Many biologists suspect a combination of factors may be responsible.

At the Cottonwood Lake Study Area, sick salamanders were first noticed in May by USGS researchers Ned Euliss and David Mushet as they conducted amphibian sampling in one of the study area’s 17 wetlands. By July, when salamanders in the study area typically reach their yearly peak in numbers, the researchers were only able to trap a total of eight salamanders in the three traps they had set out. Last July, in the same wetlands, the researchers had caught between 100 and 150 salamanders per trap.

The disease outbreak has spread to two other wetlands so far; the status of salamander populations on the many wetlands off the study site is unknown. "We’ve been studying amphibians in these 17 wetlands since 1992 and have other long-term data from the area since 1967, and have never seen or recorded any die-offs due to disease," Mushet said. Because the salamanders also exhibit unusual skin abnormalities, USGS is conducting additional testing to rule out a concurrent infection or toxin.

Since 1996, when USGS began investigating amphibian mortality, iridoviruses have been associated with numerous tiger salamander die-offs in the western United States and Canada. USGS virologist Douglas Docherty has isolated iridoviruses from tiger salamander die-offs in Idaho (1999), Utah (1998), and North Dakota (1998), and Green has found microscopic evidence of an iridovirus infection in tiger salamanders from Wyoming (1999). Other researchers have confirmed iridoviruses in tiger salamander die-offs in Arizona (1996) and Saskatchewan, Canada (1997).

USGS has identified iridovirus as the likely suspect in several other recent amphibian die-offs. According to Kathryn Converse, a wildlife disease specialist at the USGS National Wildlife Health Center, iridovirus is also the probable culprit in a late June die-off of hundreds of spring peepers – a type of frog – at Acadia National Park in Maine. Also in June, USGS scientists isolated iridovirus from mink frogs found dead in Minnesota; from wood frogs, bullfrogs and spotted salamanders found dead in North Carolina; and from wood frog tadpoles and spotted salamanders found dead and dying at a Massachusetts site where several hundred to a thousand amphibians were reported to have died. For the second consecutive year, numerous frogs and salamanders at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee experienced a spring die-off associated with iridovirus.

USGS diagnostic work on several other recent or ongoing amphibian die-offs has identified yet another amphibian disease, chytrid fungus. It has been implicated as a likely cause of major amphibian die-offs in pristine areas around the globe and has been isolated in Colorado’s Rocky Mountain National Park where state-endangered boreal toads are dying from chytrid fungus infections that are very similar to those that killed boreal toads in the park and other regions of the state in 1999.


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