Alarming Study Concludes Frogs Are Undergoing a ‘Catastrophic’ Global Die Off

BY admin March 29, 2019 Animals 7 views

Scientists aren’t known for being alarmists. And that’s exactly what makes a new study released Thursday on amphibians so, well, alarming.

Photo: AP

Scientists aren’t known for being alarmists. And that’s exactly what makes a new study released Thursday on amphibians so, well, alarming.

The paper, published in Science, chronicles a “catastrophic and ongoing loss” of amphibians around the world. In the paper’s self-described “conservative” estimate, 501 frog and other amphibian species have been ravaged by chytridiomycosis, a disease caused by a fungus that has traveled the world on the back of globalization and wildlife trade. Nearly 20 percent of those species are presumed extinct in the wild, and more species could be wiped out as humans speed along the sixth mass extinction.

Chytridiomycosis–caused by two strains of the fungus Batrachochytrium and known aschytrid for short–has spread from its original home on the Korean Peninsula to the rest of the world in an astonishingly short time. The disease causes amphibians to shed their skin and eventually die of heart failure. Chytrid has likely driven amphibian declines since the 1980s, but the two strains were only discovered in 1998 and 2013 respectively. That has researchers playing catch up, and the new study is the first to take a global view of the toll chytrid has taken.

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