Authors
Aurélie Chambouvet, David J Gower, Miloslav Jirků, Michael J Yabsley, Andrew K Davis, Guy Leonard, Finlay Maguire, Thomas M Doherty-Bone, Gabriela Bueno Bittencourt-Silva, Mark Wilkinson, Thomas A Richards
Publication date
2015/8/25
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
112
Issue
34
Pages
E4743-E4751
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The decline of amphibian populations, particularly frogs, is often cited as an example in support of the claim that Earth is undergoing its sixth mass extinction event. Amphibians seem to be particularly sensitive to emerging diseases (e.g., fungal and viral pathogens), yet the diversity and geographic distribution of infectious agents are only starting to be investigated. Recent work has linked a previously undescribed protist with mass-mortality events in the United States, in which infected frog tadpoles have an abnormally enlarged yellowish liver filled with protist cells of a presumed parasite. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that this infectious agent was affiliated with the Perkinsea: a parasitic group within the alveolates exemplified by Perkinsus sp., a “marine” protist responsible for mass-mortality events in commercial shellfish populations. Using small subunit (SSU) ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequencing, we developed a …
Total citations
20162017201820192020202120222023202461051211155123
Scholar articles
A Chambouvet, DJ Gower, M Jirků, MJ Yabsley… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015