The chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis has caused the most prominent loss of vertebrate diversity ever recorded, which peaked in the 1980s. Recent incursion by its sister species B. salamandrivorans in Europe raised the alarm for a new wave of declines and extinctions in western Palearctic urodeles. The European Commission has responded by restricting amphibian trade. However, private amphibian collections, the main end consumers, were exempted from the European legislation. Here, we report how invasion by a released, exotic newt coincided with B. salamandrivorans invasion at over 1000 km from the nearest natural outbreak site, causing mass mortality in indigenous marbled newts (Triturus marmoratus), and posing an acute threat to the survival of nearby populations of the most critically endangered European newt species (Montseny brook newt, Calotriton arnoldi). Disease management was initiated shortly after detection in a close collaboration between policy and science and included drastic on site measures and intensive disease surveillance. Despite these efforts, the disease is considered temporarily contained but not eradicated and continued efforts will be necessary to minimize the probability of further pathogen dispersal. This precedent demonstrates the importance of tackling wildlife diseases at an early stage using an integrated approach, involving all stakeholders and closing loopholes in existing regulations.

Integral chain management of wildlife diseases / A. Martel, M. Vila-Escale, D. Fernandez-Giberteau, A. Martinez-Silvestre, S. Canessa, S. Van Praet, P. Pannon, K. Chiers, A. Ferran, M. Kelly, M. Picart, D. Piulats, Z. Li, V. Pagone, L. Perez-Sorribes, C. Molina, A. Tarrago-Guarro, R. Velarde-Nieto, F. Carbonell, E. Obon, D. Martinez-Martinez, D. Guinart, R. Casanovas, S. Carranza, F. Pasmans. - In: CONSERVATION LETTERS. - ISSN 1755-263X. - 13:2(2020), pp. e12707.1-e12707.6. [10.1111/conl.12707]

Integral chain management of wildlife diseases

S. Canessa;
2020

Abstract

The chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis has caused the most prominent loss of vertebrate diversity ever recorded, which peaked in the 1980s. Recent incursion by its sister species B. salamandrivorans in Europe raised the alarm for a new wave of declines and extinctions in western Palearctic urodeles. The European Commission has responded by restricting amphibian trade. However, private amphibian collections, the main end consumers, were exempted from the European legislation. Here, we report how invasion by a released, exotic newt coincided with B. salamandrivorans invasion at over 1000 km from the nearest natural outbreak site, causing mass mortality in indigenous marbled newts (Triturus marmoratus), and posing an acute threat to the survival of nearby populations of the most critically endangered European newt species (Montseny brook newt, Calotriton arnoldi). Disease management was initiated shortly after detection in a close collaboration between policy and science and included drastic on site measures and intensive disease surveillance. Despite these efforts, the disease is considered temporarily contained but not eradicated and continued efforts will be necessary to minimize the probability of further pathogen dispersal. This precedent demonstrates the importance of tackling wildlife diseases at an early stage using an integrated approach, involving all stakeholders and closing loopholes in existing regulations.
English
amphibian; Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans; biodiversity; conservation; policy; wildlife diseases;
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 15: Life on land
2020
4-feb-2020
Wiley Blackwell Publishing
13
2
e12707
1
6
6
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
orcid
crossref
datacite
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Integral chain management of wildlife diseases / A. Martel, M. Vila-Escale, D. Fernandez-Giberteau, A. Martinez-Silvestre, S. Canessa, S. Van Praet, P. Pannon, K. Chiers, A. Ferran, M. Kelly, M. Picart, D. Piulats, Z. Li, V. Pagone, L. Perez-Sorribes, C. Molina, A. Tarrago-Guarro, R. Velarde-Nieto, F. Carbonell, E. Obon, D. Martinez-Martinez, D. Guinart, R. Casanovas, S. Carranza, F. Pasmans. - In: CONSERVATION LETTERS. - ISSN 1755-263X. - 13:2(2020), pp. e12707.1-e12707.6. [10.1111/conl.12707]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
25
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
A. Martel, M. Vila-Escale, D. Fernandez-Giberteau, A. Martinez-Silvestre, S. Canessa, S. Van Praet, P. Pannon, K. Chiers, A. Ferran, M. Kelly, M. Picart, D. Piulats, Z. Li, V. Pagone, L. Perez-Sorribes, C. Molina, A. Tarrago-Guarro, R. Velarde-Nieto, F. Carbonell, E. Obon, D. Martinez-Martinez, D. Guinart, R. Casanovas, S. Carranza, F. Pasmans
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1040204
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