Fungus threatens to wipe out Philippine frogs

 

 
 
 
 
Golden frogs, like the one seen here at the El Nispero del Valle de Anton Zoo outside Panama City in April 2009, are in danger from a deadly fungus. Chytrid fungus, which has wiped out hundreds of amphibian species in the Americas, is now devastating the populations of five frog species in the Philippines, experts said Wednesday.
 

Golden frogs, like the one seen here at the El Nispero del Valle de Anton Zoo outside Panama City in April 2009, are in danger from a deadly fungus. Chytrid fungus, which has wiped out hundreds of amphibian species in the Americas, is now devastating the populations of five frog species in the Philippines, experts said Wednesday.

Photograph by: Elmer Martinez, AFP

MANILA – A deadly frog fungus that has wiped out hundreds of amphibian species in the Americas is now devastating the populations of five frog species in the Philippines, experts said Wednesday.

A two-year nationwide survey by a team of US and Filipino scientists found that the Philippines has become the third country in Asia to be hit by the chytrid fungus.

The fungus, which attacks the skin of frogs and salamanders and affects the formation of tadpoles' body parts, is also present in Japan and Indonesia.

The Luzon striped frog, Rana similis, one of five affected endemic species, has practically disappeared from the lowland forests of Mount Labo on the southeast tip of the main Philippine island of Luzon, said Arvin Diesmos, curator of amphibians and reptiles at the National Museum of the Philippines.

The Luzon stream frog (Rana luzonensis), two species of the Luzon fanged frog (Limnonectes woodworth and Limnonectes macrocephalus), and the Puddle frog (Occidozyga laevis) were also found to be infected in Labo and the Palay-palay mountain range near Manila.

The nocturnal, stream-dwelling frogs form part of the diet of Philippine fauna, many of them threatened with extinction.

"This is a very serious threat to amphibian biodiversity in the Philippines," said Rafe Brown, Diesmos' counterpart at the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute and a member of the study team.

"The Philippines is home to an incredibly diverse amphibian fauna. Along with forest destruction, pollution, and climate change, chytrid fungus may turn out to be the 'final blow' that sparks major amphibian extinctions in the archipelago," he added.

He said the team that took part in the study suspects all of these factors could be linked to the spread of the fungus.

At least 592 of the country's 1,137 endemic species of amphibians, birds and mammals are either threatened or endangered, according to the environment and natural resources department.

The Philippines has about 110 species of frogs, 80 percent of them endemic to the country, Diesmos said.

The naturally-occurring chytrid fungus has been linked to "hundreds" of amphibian extinctions in Europe, Australia and the Americas, according to Brown.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Golden frogs, like the one seen here at the El Nispero del Valle de Anton Zoo outside Panama City in April 2009, are in danger from a deadly fungus. Chytrid fungus, which has wiped out hundreds of amphibian species in the Americas, is now devastating the populations of five frog species in the Philippines, experts said Wednesday.
 

Golden frogs, like the one seen here at the El Nispero del Valle de Anton Zoo outside Panama City in April 2009, are in danger from a deadly fungus. Chytrid fungus, which has wiped out hundreds of amphibian species in the Americas, is now devastating the populations of five frog species in the Philippines, experts said Wednesday.

Photograph by: Elmer Martinez, AFP

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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