Yellow Legged Sierra frogs being killed by African Frog Disease Fox News 16 May

63bkpkr

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A Fox News story posted 16 May 2013 points the finger of origin of the demise of the Sierra Yellow Legged frog at the scientifically imported African Frog that carries a particular fungus which has nearly wiped out the Sierra Yellow Legged Frog!

Note: Along with the written Fox News report there is a video of how the pond in Golden Gate Park is being Rid of the African Frogs and during the video the announcer states that the "Sierra Yellow Legged" and then the rest of that statement has been altered! However the entire video is talking about how frogs all over the state are dieing from this African Frog carried Fungus.

I've copied and attached the Fox News Written Report below, in Word Format as for some reason I could not copy and paste the entire article, which specifically says frogs in the Sierras have nearly been wiped out but the written report does not state the yellow legged frog as does the Fox News video. NOW DO WE HAVE SOME AMMUNITION TO FIGHT!!!!


NOTE: The sound track of the video has been altered further!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! So that has taken place from about 2:45 PM to now 3:10 PM 18 May 2013

........................63BKPRK

Addendum: 4:03 PM 18May 2013 - I just ran the video again and some of the sound was back. In the video they clearly state that it is this fungus that is killing the California Yellow Legged Frog!................63bkpkr


Copied copy of the original Fox News written report of 16 May 2013 (found it on Google)

(NOTE: Bold letters were added by myself to highlight what I thought were specifically oriented to our current struggle........63bkpkr)

African frogs once imported to laboratories and hospitals around the world may have carried with them a devastating fungal infection thought to be responsible for a rapid, global decline in amphibians, according to new research.

The fungus is called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, or Bd for short. Amphibians have been dying in large numbers in every continent except Antarctica since the late 1980s and this fungus has been blamed as a large contributing factor since the late 1990s. But researchers haven't proven how Bd could have spread so quickly from Africa, where it was first found in the wild in the 1930s.

The new research, published online May 15 in the journal PLOS One, strengthens the ties between the proliferation of the disease and the worldwide spread of Xenopus laevis, the African clawed frog. The frogs were popular in the early- and mid-20th century for use in pregnancy tests. Scientists still use them in laboratory experiments.

To begin building their own colonies of the easy-to-keep species, hospitals or laboratories would order a few frogs from Africa, said study lead author Vance Vredenburg, a conservation biologist from San Francisco State University.
Before doctors could reliably and directly measure human hormone levels, they would inject a small amount of urine from a woman who might be pregnant under the skin of the frog. Days later, checking if the frog had ovulated would accurately reveal if the woman was pregnant.
After modern pregnancy tests became established, around the late 1960s, some of the people who maintained the frog colonies probably released them in nearby ponds or other waterways, said Vredenburg, accelerating the spread of the frogs -- and the disease.

The new study suggests the frogs were carrying a fungal pathogen, Bd. The African clawed frog can act as a carrier of the fungus without developing symptoms, but Bd is deadly to most other amphibians. When an infected frog reached a new location, it brought with it the fast-reproducing fungus. Bd affects the skin of amphibians and interrupts vital functions such as the absorption of water and gases, which leads to death.
The destruction of prime habitat is a major cause of amphibian decline and extinction, but the fungus is causing deaths even in pristine habitats.
"Here in California, it killed 99.9 percent of the populations of frogs in the mountains," said Vredenburg. "It's driven literally hundreds of species of amphibians to extinction in other parts of the world."
Vredenburg's team analyzed 201 museum specimens of African clawed frogs, including many gathered in Africa and held in California. They found that two frogs gathered in Africa in 1935 had Bd, as did frogs collected decades later in the wild in California. Because these wild populations could have only reached the state by importation from Africa, the scientists believe this fortifies the connection.
"We're making that link a little tighter," said Vredenburg. "That could be the explanation, or one of the pathways anyway, for this pathogen to get to the New World."

The study used preserved specimens, so to find evidence of the fungus, the scientists had to analyze something that could endure the preservation process. They settled on a small genetic marker that is very small and specific to the Bd fungus. They took swabs from each frog's skin and extracted the DNA.
"It's a good, very interesting piece of work and it backs up what we have already known from other studies," said Matthew Fisher, an evolutionary epidemiologist at Imperial College London who studies Bd and other fungi. "But it takes it further because it shows that this is happening in the United States."
Fisher said that Vredenburg's team needs to take one more step to be certain -- prove that the form of Bd that's killing animals in California is the same type that they've found in their samples. This could be done by comparing the genomes of the Bd found in the museum samples to the Bd that's killing frogs in the wild, said Fisher.
Regardless of how the fungus began spreading, stopping it from spreading farther could be difficult, despite efforts to restrict the movement of amphibians between countries. Vredenburg said he's been studying bacteria with antifungal properties that live on some amphibians' skin, and seeing if they could be transplanted onto amphibians that are susceptible to Bd. These antifungal agents could augment their defenses.
"We're doing experiments where we're actually doing bio-augmentation," said Vredenburg. "We're taking the lead from a lot of the work that's been done on humans."
 

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Hefty1

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You have been busy my man...Good Job...Nice work. :icon_thumleft:

Now lets all pound the Legislators, EPA, anybody that NEEDS to know this stuff, before they start on the 23 legged ant.
 

jeff of pa

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so if all the amphibians including the Yellow Legged Sierra frogs die off,
allot of "protected" land should no longer need to be off limits.

win/win :laughing7:[h=2][/h]
 

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