Coral Reefs: 2000
Publications
Author: Carey,
C.
Title: Infectious disease and worldwide declines of
amphibian populations, with comments on emerging diseases in coral
reef organisms and in humans.
Publication: Environmental Health
Perspectives 108(Supplement 1): 143-150, 2000.
© National Institute of Environmental Health
Notes: Many
populations of amphibians are declining on all six continents on
which they occur. Some causes of amphibian declines, such as
habitat destruction, direct application of xenobiotics, and
introduction of predators or competitors, are clearly attributable
to human activities. Infectious disease appears to be the direct
cause of mass amphibian die-offs in relatively undisturbed areas
of the world where anthropomorphic environmental disruption is
minimal. In these cases, it is not yet clear whether these
epizootics result from the natural evolution of new pathogens or
from environmental changes that promote the emergence of
pathogenic forms and/or that weaken the immune defenses of
amphibians. Because some aspects of pathogen-related amphibian
mass mortalities are similar to outbreaks of new diseases in
humans and coral reef organisms, amphibian declines may be part of
a much larger pattern than previously appreciated.
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