RACE team leader Mat Fisher's report from the Pyrenees:
"Lac Arlet used to be the most amphibian rich Pyrenean lakes I knew. Chytrid continues to reap its grisly crop of metamorphs this August and the Alytes are now few and far between. More newt and Rana mortalities too compared against subsequent years."
Photo: (c) Mat Fisher.
Friday, 28 August 2015
Saturday, 22 August 2015
Cyclone vs. chytrid
A new paper published in Scientific Reports shows that cyclones may reduce Bd prevalence. Cyclones reduce canopy cover which leads to warmer microclimates. Warmer microclimates reduce Bd infection.
http://www.nature.com/articles/srep13472
Photo: (c) Mat Fisher.
http://www.nature.com/articles/srep13472
Photo: (c) Mat Fisher.
Saturday, 1 August 2015
What It’s Like to Watch a Species Go Extinct - or why we study Bd
Karen Lips was a grad student when she came face to face with a mass extinction for the first time. It was the early 1990s, and she was doing research on frogs in the mountains of Costa Rica. At the beginning, they were everywhere. And then, poof: “I came back one year and there were no frogs,” she remembers. Puzzled, she explored other sites—and started turning up corpses. An area that had thrummed with amphibian life had morphed into a graveyard.
Read more here:
http://www.wired.com/2015/07/watching-species-go-extinct-frogs-bd-salamanders-bsal/
Red-bellied newt (Taricha rivularis) Emanuele Biggi/anura.it
Read more here:
http://www.wired.com/2015/07/watching-species-go-extinct-frogs-bd-salamanders-bsal/
Red-bellied newt (Taricha rivularis) Emanuele Biggi/anura.it
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)