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Recent Asian origin of chytrid fungi causing global amphibian declines

Authors :
Natural Environment Research Council (UK)
Leverhulme Trust
Hungarian Scientific Research Fund
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile)
Royal Geographical Society
National Research Foundation of Korea
Governo do Estado de São Paulo
Australian Research Council
Wolfson Foundation
Swedish Research Council
National Research Foundation (South Africa)
Iranian National Science Foundation
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
O’Hanlon, Simon J.
Rieux, Adrien
Farrer, Rhys A.
Rosa, Gonçalo M.
Waldman, Bruce
Bataille, Arnaud
Kosch, Tiffany A.
Murray, Kris A.
Brankovics, Balázs
Fumagalli, Matteo
Martin, Michael D.
Wales, Nathan
Alvarado-Rybak, Mario
Bates, Kieran A.
Berger, Lee R.
Böll, Susanne
Brookes, Lola
Clare, Frances C.
Courtois, Elodie A.
Cunningham, Andrew A.
Doherty-Bone, Thomas M.
Ghosh, Pria
Gower, David J.
Hintz, William E.
Höglund, Jacob
Jenkinson, Thomas S.
Lin, Chun-Fu
Laurila, Anssi
Loyau, A.
Martel, An
Meurling, Sara
Miaud, Claude
Minting, Pete
Pasmans, Frank
Schmeller, Dirk S.
Schmidt, Benedikt R.
Shelton, Jennifer M. G.
Skerratt, Lee
Smith, Freya
Soto-Azat, Claudio
Spagnoletti, Matteo
Tessa, Giulia
Toledo, Luis Felipe
Valenzuela-Sánchez, Andrés
Verster, Ruhan
Vörös, Judit
Webb, Rebecca J.
Wierzbicki, Claudia
Wombwell, Emma
Zamudio, Kelly R.
Aanensen, David M.
James, Timothy Y.
Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
Weldon, Ché
Bosch, Jaime
Balloux, François
Garner, Trenton W. J.
Fisher, Matthew C.
Natural Environment Research Council (UK)
Leverhulme Trust
Hungarian Scientific Research Fund
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile)
Royal Geographical Society
National Research Foundation of Korea
Governo do Estado de São Paulo
Australian Research Council
Wolfson Foundation
Swedish Research Council
National Research Foundation (South Africa)
Iranian National Science Foundation
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
O’Hanlon, Simon J.
Rieux, Adrien
Farrer, Rhys A.
Rosa, Gonçalo M.
Waldman, Bruce
Bataille, Arnaud
Kosch, Tiffany A.
Murray, Kris A.
Brankovics, Balázs
Fumagalli, Matteo
Martin, Michael D.
Wales, Nathan
Alvarado-Rybak, Mario
Bates, Kieran A.
Berger, Lee R.
Böll, Susanne
Brookes, Lola
Clare, Frances C.
Courtois, Elodie A.
Cunningham, Andrew A.
Doherty-Bone, Thomas M.
Ghosh, Pria
Gower, David J.
Hintz, William E.
Höglund, Jacob
Jenkinson, Thomas S.
Lin, Chun-Fu
Laurila, Anssi
Loyau, A.
Martel, An
Meurling, Sara
Miaud, Claude
Minting, Pete
Pasmans, Frank
Schmeller, Dirk S.
Schmidt, Benedikt R.
Shelton, Jennifer M. G.
Skerratt, Lee
Smith, Freya
Soto-Azat, Claudio
Spagnoletti, Matteo
Tessa, Giulia
Toledo, Luis Felipe
Valenzuela-Sánchez, Andrés
Verster, Ruhan
Vörös, Judit
Webb, Rebecca J.
Wierzbicki, Claudia
Wombwell, Emma
Zamudio, Kelly R.
Aanensen, David M.
James, Timothy Y.
Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
Weldon, Ché
Bosch, Jaime
Balloux, François
Garner, Trenton W. J.
Fisher, Matthew C.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Globalized infectious diseases are causing species declines worldwide, but their source often remains elusive. We used whole-genome sequencing to solve the spatiotemporal origins of the most devastating panzootic to date, caused by the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, a proximate driver of global amphibian declines. We traced the source of B. dendrobatidis to the Korean peninsula, where one lineage, BdASIA-1, exhibits the genetic hallmarks of an ancestral population that seeded the panzootic. We date the emergence of this pathogen to the early 20th century, coinciding with the global expansion of commercial trade in amphibians, and we show that intercontinental transmission is ongoing. Our findings point to East Asia as a geographic hotspot for B. dendrobatidis biodiversity and the original source of these lineages that now parasitize amphibians worldwide.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1257734270
Document Type :
Electronic Resource