Authors
Rhys A Farrer, Lucy A Weinert, Jon Bielby, Trenton WJ Garner, Francois Balloux, Frances Clare, Jaime Bosch, Andrew A Cunningham, Che Weldon, Louis H du Preez, Lucy Anderson, Sergei L Kosakovsky Pond, Revital Shahar-Golan, Daniel A Henk, Matthew C Fisher
Publication date
2011/11/15
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
108
Issue
46
Pages
18732-18736
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) is a globally ubiquitous fungal infection that has emerged to become a primary driver of amphibian biodiversity loss. Despite widespread effort to understand the emergence of this panzootic, the origins of the infection, its patterns of global spread, and principle mode of evolution remain largely unknown. Using comparative population genomics, we discovered three deeply diverged lineages of Bd associated with amphibians. Two of these lineages were found in multiple continents and are associated with known introductions by the amphibian trade. We found that isolates belonging to one clade, the global panzootic lineage (BdGPL) have emerged across at least five continents during the 20th century and are associated with the onset of epizootics in North America, Central America, the Caribbean, Australia, and Europe. The two newly identified divergent lineages, Cape …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RA Farrer, LA Weinert, J Bielby, TWJ Garner, F Balloux… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011