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1. Stable in vitro fluorescence for enhanced live imaging of infection models for Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis.

2. Centrifugation is an effective and inexpensive way to determine Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis quantity in water samples with low turbidity.

3. Microclimatic Growth Rates of Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans under Current and Future Climates: A Very High Spatial Resolution SDM for Bsal and Salamandra salamandra (Linnaeus, 1758) within Forest Habitats of the European Hotspot Area.

4. Drosophila melanogaster as a model arthropod carrier for the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis.

5. Archival mitogenomes identify invasion by the Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis CAPE lineage caused an African amphibian extinction in the wild.

7. Release trial of captive-bred variable harlequin frogs Atelopus varius shows that frogs disperse rapidly, are difficult to recapture and do not readily regain skin toxicity

8. Predominant prevalence of Ranavirus in southern Brazil, a region with widespread occurrence of the amphibian chytrid.

9. Occurrences of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis in Pernambuco state, Brazil, with the inclusion of two new cases of infection from the Caatinga.

10. Genome variation in the Batrachochytrium pathogens of amphibians.

11. Alpine salamanders at risk? The current status of an emerging fungal pathogen.

12. Are novel or locally adapted pathogens more devastating and why? Resolving opposing hypotheses.

13. Release trial of captive-bred variable harlequin frogs Atelopus varius shows that frogs disperse rapidly, are difficult to recapture and do not readily regain skin toxicity.

14. Invasibility of a North American soil ecosystem to amphibian-killing fungal pathogens.

15. Dynamic effects of thermal acclimation on chytridiomycosis infection intensity and transmission potential in Xenopus laevis

16. Frog Saunas.

18. Host Identity Matters-Up to a Point: The Community Context of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis Transmission.

19. Chemical disinfection as a simple and reliable method to control the amphibian chytrid fungus at breeding points of endangered amphibians.

20. Optimal management decisions are robust to unknown dynamics in an amphibian metapopulation plagued by disease.

21. Genetic mechanisms and biological processes underlying host response to ophidiomycosis (snake fungal disease) inferred from tissue‐specific transcriptome analyses.

22. Skin microbiome disturbance linked to drought‐associated amphibian disease.

23. FIRST RECORD OF BATRACHOCHYTRIUM DENDROBATIDIS IN THE NORTHERN NETHERLANDS.

24. The complement system and its involvement in inhibition of Batrachochytriym dendrobatidis, a lethal fungal pathogen of amphibians

25. Winter ‘sauna’ helps frogs fight off fungal disease.

26. Microclimatic Growth Rates of Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans under Current and Future Climates: A Very High Spatial Resolution SDM for Bsal and Salamandra salamandra (Linnaeus, 1758) within Forest Habitats of the European Hotspot Area

27. When the host's away, the pathogen will play: the protective role of the skin microbiome during hibernation.

28. A new cryptic species of terrestrial breeding frog of the Pristimantis danae Group (Anura, Strabomantidae) from montane forests in Ayacucho, Peru.

29. FINDeM: A CRISPR‐based, molecular method for rapid, inexpensive and field‐deployable organism detection.

30. Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis in the Arid and Thermally Extreme Sonoran Desert.

31. Effects of temperature on the interaction between amphibian skin bacteria and Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis.

32. Amphibian larvae benefit from a warm environment under simultaneous threat from chytridiomycosis and ranavirosis.

33. Chytridiomycosis and climate change: exposure to Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis and mild winter conditions do not increase mortality in juvenile agile frogs during hibernation.

34. OCCURRENCE OF PATHOGENIC CHYTRID FUNGI BATRACHOCHYTRIUM SALAMANDRIVORANS AND BATRACHOCHYTRIUM DENDROBATIDIS IN THE HONG KONG NEWT (PARAMESOTRITON HONGKONGENSIS) AND OTHER WILD AND IMPORTED AMPHIBIANS IN A SUBTROPICAL ASIAN REGION.

35. KEEPING THE HEAT ON: WEIGHTED SURVEILLANCE FOR CHYTRID FUNGUS (BATRACHOCHYTRIUM DENDROBATIDIS) IN DIXIE VALLEY TOADS (ANAXYRUS [= BUFO] WILLIAMSI).

36. Preparing for a Bsal invasion into North America has improved multi-sector readiness

37. Divergent population responses following salamander mass mortalities and declines driven by the emerging pathogen Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans.

38. Accounting for bias in prevalence estimation: The case of a globally emerging pathogen.

39. Widespread amphibian Perkinsea infections associated with Ranidae hosts, cooler months and Ranavirus co‐infection.

40. Successful eradication of invasive American bullfrogs leads to coextirpation of emerging pathogens.

41. Metabolites of Xenorhabdus bacteria are potent candidates for mitigating amphibian chytridiomycosis.

42. Chytridiomycosis in Sri Lanka: Predicting the future of a global amphibian hotspot.

43. Effects of temperature on the interaction between amphibian skin bacteria and Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis

44. Introduction to the special issue Amphibian immunity: stress, disease and ecoimmunology.

45. Amphibian infection tolerance to chytridiomycosis.

46. Towards the generation of gnotobiotic larvae as a tool to investigate the influence of the microbiome on the development of the amphibian immune system.

47. Selection of an anti-pathogen skin microbiome following prophylaxis treatment in an amphibian model system.

48. Effects of exogenous elevation of corticosterone on immunity and the skin microbiome of eastern newts (Notophthalmus viridescens).

49. Carryover effects from environmental change in early life: An overlooked driver of the amphibian extinction crisis?

50. Successful eradication of invasive American bullfrogs leads to coextirpation of emerging pathogens

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