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| Study - Farms Fuel Frog Deformities |
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| Written by Dave Mosher | |
| Sunday, 23 September 2007 | |
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LiveScience Staff Writer
Frog-deforming infections
caused by tiny parasites are increasing because of North American farms'
nutrient-rich watershed, a new study shows.
The excess nitrogen and
phosphorus found in farm runoff causes more algae to grow, which increases
snail populations that host microscopic parasites called trematodes, said
Pieter Johnson, a water scientist at the
"This is the first
study to show that nutrient enrichment drives the abundance of these parasites,
increasing levels of amphibian infection and subsequent
malformations," said Johnson.
Johnson noted that he and
his colleagues' work, which is detailed in the Sept. 24 issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could also explain "a wide
array of diseases potentially linked to nutrient pollution."
Frog species also are
vanishing from Earth in the past few decades for reasons that are difficult to
tease apart, including habitat loss, global
warming and emerging diseases such as one caused by chytrid
fungus. Nutrient pollution and limb malformations also contribute, Johnson
said.
A worldwide study of more
than 6,000 species of amphibians recently concluded that 32 percent were
threatened and 43 percent were declining in population.
History of deformities
Deformed frogs first gained
international attention in the mid-1990s, when a group of schoolchildren
discovered a pond where more than half of the leopard frogs had missing or
extra limbs, Johnson said. Since then, widespread reports of deformed
amphibians have led to speculation that the abnormalities were being caused by
pesticides, increased ultraviolet radiation or parasitic infection.
Parasite infection is now
recognized as a major cause of such
deformities, but the environmental factors responsible for increases in
parasite abundance have largely remained a mystery.
"What we found is that
nitrogen and phosphorus pollution from agriculture, cattle grazing and domestic
runoff have the potential to significantly promote parasitic infection and
deformities in frogs," Johnson said.
The trematode life cycle
involves three host species. The tiny parasites form cysts in the developing
limbs of tadpoles, causing missing limbs, extra limbs and other malformations,
Johnson said. Aside from this stage and an infectious one in snails and the
cyst stage in frogs, predators complete the trematode life cycle by eating
infected frogs and spreading the parasite back into the ecosystem.
Nutritious problem
To discover the link
between farms and the trematode infections, Johnson and his team built 36
artificial ponds similar to farm stock tanks, where frogs and salamanders often
breed and deposit their eggs.
The researchers then
stocked each tank with snails and green frog tadpoles and, in addition to
adding nutrients, they dropped in parasite eggs. In ponds with added nutrients,
Johnson said, the total mass of snails was 50 percent greater and parasite egg
production was eight times as great.
The infection rate in frogs
rose between two to five times in those tanks, he added.
"We were able to watch
nutrient pollution move through the life cycle of the parasite as it cascaded
through the food web," he said. "Since most human diseases involve
multiple hosts, understanding how increased
nutrient pollution affects freshwater and marine food webs to influence
disease is an emerging frontier in ecological research." http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20070924/sc_livescience/studyfarmsfuelfrogdeformities
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