TY - JOUR
T1 - Trematode-associated morbidity and mortality of tadpoles in Israel
AU - Goren, L.
AU - Routtu, J.
AU - Ben-Ami, F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
PY - 2014/9/25
Y1 - 2014/9/25
N2 - Amphibians stand at the forefront of the global biodiversity crisis. The causes of their decline are diverse and include a rise in amphibian malformations due to various factors, especially trematode infection. However, linking amphibian mortality and morbidity with trematode infection has proven to be challenging due to the complex life cycle of the trematodes and the fact that trematodes are nonfastidious in their choice of definitive hosts. In Israel, the decline in local amphibian populations has been mostly attributed to the loss and degradation of wetlands and riparian habitats. Recently, however, there have been several reports of morbidity and mortality of tadpoles with signs of edema and malformations from various localities in Israel. We collected dead and morbid tadpoles and metamorphs of Hyla savignyi and Pelophylax bedriagae, and we showed that the morbidity and the deformations observed in the field are the result of infection by trematodes. We also isolated an echinostomatid trematode from the malformed and edematous tadpoles and from the freshwater snail Bulinus truncatus, all from the same site. We further succeeded in experimentally infecting H. savignyi tadpoles by echinostomatid cercariae that were shed from the snails, and we showed that infection had significantly increased the mortality rates of these tadpoles. The combination of high trematode prevalence and their pathogenic effects suggests that in nature, the effect of echinostome infection on amphibians may be substantial and could become an emerging disease in Israel.
AB - Amphibians stand at the forefront of the global biodiversity crisis. The causes of their decline are diverse and include a rise in amphibian malformations due to various factors, especially trematode infection. However, linking amphibian mortality and morbidity with trematode infection has proven to be challenging due to the complex life cycle of the trematodes and the fact that trematodes are nonfastidious in their choice of definitive hosts. In Israel, the decline in local amphibian populations has been mostly attributed to the loss and degradation of wetlands and riparian habitats. Recently, however, there have been several reports of morbidity and mortality of tadpoles with signs of edema and malformations from various localities in Israel. We collected dead and morbid tadpoles and metamorphs of Hyla savignyi and Pelophylax bedriagae, and we showed that the morbidity and the deformations observed in the field are the result of infection by trematodes. We also isolated an echinostomatid trematode from the malformed and edematous tadpoles and from the freshwater snail Bulinus truncatus, all from the same site. We further succeeded in experimentally infecting H. savignyi tadpoles by echinostomatid cercariae that were shed from the snails, and we showed that infection had significantly increased the mortality rates of these tadpoles. The combination of high trematode prevalence and their pathogenic effects suggests that in nature, the effect of echinostome infection on amphibians may be substantial and could become an emerging disease in Israel.
KW - Amphibian decline
KW - Amphibian malformations
KW - Bulinus truncatus
KW - Echinostomatidae
KW - Emerging diseases
KW - Hyla savignyi
KW - Pelophylax bedriagae
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84918806224&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00436-014-4051-1
DO - 10.1007/s00436-014-4051-1
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C2 - 25098342
AN - SCOPUS:84918806224
SN - 0932-0113
VL - 113
SP - 3833
EP - 3841
JO - Parasitology Research
JF - Parasitology Research
IS - 10
ER -