PLOS ONE: Widespread Occurrence of Bd in French Guiana, South America
The amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd)
is a purported agent of decline and extinction of many amphibian
populations worldwide. Its occurrence remains poorly documented in many
tropical regions, including the Guiana Shield, despite the area’s high
amphibian diversity. We conducted a comprehensive assessment of Bd in French Guiana in order to (1) determine its geographical distribution, (2) test variation of Bd prevalence among species in French Guiana and compare it to earlier reported values in other South American anuran species (http://www.bd-maps.net;
123 species from 15 genera) to define sentinel species for future work,
(3) track changes in prevalence through time and (4) determine if Bd presence had a negative effect on one selected species. We tested the presence of Bd in 14 species at 11 sites for a total of 1053 samples (306 in 2009 and 747 in 2012). At least one Bd-positive individual was found at eight out of 11 sites, suggesting a wide distribution of Bd
in French Guiana. The pathogen was not uniformly distributed among the
studied amphibian hosts, with Dendrobatidae species displaying the
highest prevalence (12.4%) as compared to Bufonidae (2.6 %) and Hylidae
(1.5%). In contrast to earlier reported values, we found highest
prevalence for three Dendrobatidae species and two of them displayed an
increase in Bd prevalence from 2009 to 2012. Those three species might be the sentinel species of choice for French Guiana. For Dendrobates tinctorius,
of key conservation value in the Guiana Shield, smaller female
individuals were more likely to be infected, suggesting either that
frogs can outgrow their chytrid infections or that the disease induces
developmental stress limiting growth. Generally, our study supports the
idea that Bd is more widespread than previously thought and occurs at remote places in the lowland forest of the Guiana shield.
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