Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.

The pandemic amphibian disease chytridiomycosis often exhibits strong seasonality in both prevalence and disease-associated mortality once it becomes endemic. One hypothesis that could explain this temporal pattern is that simple weather-driven pathogen proliferation (population growth) is a major d...

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Main Authors: Kris A Murray, Lee F Skerratt, Stephen Garland, Darren Kriticos, Hamish McCallum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3629077?pdf=render
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author Kris A Murray
Lee F Skerratt
Stephen Garland
Darren Kriticos
Hamish McCallum
author_facet Kris A Murray
Lee F Skerratt
Stephen Garland
Darren Kriticos
Hamish McCallum
author_sort Kris A Murray
collection DOAJ
description The pandemic amphibian disease chytridiomycosis often exhibits strong seasonality in both prevalence and disease-associated mortality once it becomes endemic. One hypothesis that could explain this temporal pattern is that simple weather-driven pathogen proliferation (population growth) is a major driver of chytridiomycosis disease dynamics. Despite various elaborations of this hypothesis in the literature for explaining amphibian declines (e.g., the chytrid thermal-optimum hypothesis) it has not been formally tested on infection patterns in the wild. In this study we developed a simple process-based model to simulate the growth of the pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) under varying weather conditions to provide an a priori test of a weather-linked pathogen proliferation hypothesis for endemic chytridiomycosis. We found strong support for several predictions of the proliferation hypothesis when applied to our model species, Litoria pearsoniana, sampled across multiple sites and years: the weather-driven simulations of pathogen growth potential (represented as a growth index in the 30 days prior to sampling; GI30) were positively related to both the prevalence and intensity of Bd infections, which were themselves strongly and positively correlated. In addition, a machine-learning classifier achieved ~72% success in classifying positive qPCR results when utilising just three informative predictors 1) GI30, 2) frog body size and 3) rain on the day of sampling. Hence, while intrinsic traits of the individuals sampled (species, size, sex) and nuisance sampling variables (rainfall when sampling) influenced infection patterns obtained when sampling via qPCR, our results also strongly suggest that weather-linked pathogen proliferation plays a key role in the infection dynamics of endemic chytridiomycosis in our study system. Predictive applications of the model include surveillance design, outbreak preparedness and response, climate change scenario modelling and the interpretation of historical patterns of amphibian decline.
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spelling doaj.art-ee83ffb2824d4676aad5b44ca991f18b2022-12-21T21:09:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0184e6106110.1371/journal.pone.0061061Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.Kris A MurrayLee F SkerrattStephen GarlandDarren KriticosHamish McCallumThe pandemic amphibian disease chytridiomycosis often exhibits strong seasonality in both prevalence and disease-associated mortality once it becomes endemic. One hypothesis that could explain this temporal pattern is that simple weather-driven pathogen proliferation (population growth) is a major driver of chytridiomycosis disease dynamics. Despite various elaborations of this hypothesis in the literature for explaining amphibian declines (e.g., the chytrid thermal-optimum hypothesis) it has not been formally tested on infection patterns in the wild. In this study we developed a simple process-based model to simulate the growth of the pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) under varying weather conditions to provide an a priori test of a weather-linked pathogen proliferation hypothesis for endemic chytridiomycosis. We found strong support for several predictions of the proliferation hypothesis when applied to our model species, Litoria pearsoniana, sampled across multiple sites and years: the weather-driven simulations of pathogen growth potential (represented as a growth index in the 30 days prior to sampling; GI30) were positively related to both the prevalence and intensity of Bd infections, which were themselves strongly and positively correlated. In addition, a machine-learning classifier achieved ~72% success in classifying positive qPCR results when utilising just three informative predictors 1) GI30, 2) frog body size and 3) rain on the day of sampling. Hence, while intrinsic traits of the individuals sampled (species, size, sex) and nuisance sampling variables (rainfall when sampling) influenced infection patterns obtained when sampling via qPCR, our results also strongly suggest that weather-linked pathogen proliferation plays a key role in the infection dynamics of endemic chytridiomycosis in our study system. Predictive applications of the model include surveillance design, outbreak preparedness and response, climate change scenario modelling and the interpretation of historical patterns of amphibian decline.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3629077?pdf=render
spellingShingle Kris A Murray
Lee F Skerratt
Stephen Garland
Darren Kriticos
Hamish McCallum
Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.
PLoS ONE
title Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.
title_full Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.
title_fullStr Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.
title_full_unstemmed Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.
title_short Whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis: a pathogen proliferation approach.
title_sort whether the weather drives patterns of endemic amphibian chytridiomycosis a pathogen proliferation approach
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3629077?pdf=render
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