| Literature DB >> 27149624 |
Mareike Hirschfeld1, David C Blackburn2, Thomas M Doherty-Bone3, LeGrand Nono Gonwouo4, Sonia Ghose2, Mark-Oliver Rödel1.
Abstract
Amphibian populations are vanishing worldwide. Declines and extinctions of many populations have been attributed to chytridiomycosis, a disease induced by the pathogenic fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd). In Africa, however, changes in amphibian assemblages were typically attributed to habitat change. We conducted a retrospective study utilizing field surveys from 2004-2012 of the anuran faunas on two mountains in western Cameroon, a hotspot of African amphibian diversity. The number of species detected was negatively influenced by year, habitat degradation, and elevation, and we detected a decline of certain species. Because another study in this region revealed an emergence of Bd in 2008, we screened additional recent field-collected samples and also pre-decline preserved museum specimens for the presence of Bd supporting emergence before 2008. When comparing the years before and after Bd detection, we found significantly diminished frog species richness and abundance on both mountains after Bd emergence. Our analyses suggest that this may be the first disease-driven community-level decline in anuran biodiversity in Central Africa. The disappearance of several species known to tolerate habitat degradation, and a trend of stronger declines at higher elevations, are consistent with Bd-induced declines in other regions. Not all species decreased; populations of some species remained constant, and others increased after the emergence of Bd. This variation might be explained by species-specific differences in infection probability. Increased habitat protection and Bd-mitigation strategies are needed for sustaining diverse amphibian communities such as those on Mt. Manengouba, which contains nearly half of Cameroon's frog diversity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27149624 PMCID: PMC4858272 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Map of the study region.
Locations of the study sites, Mt. Manengouba and Mt. Oku, are marked with black triangles, additional localities surveyed for Bd are represented by black dots; map based on SRTM elevation model (light = low, dark = high elevations) [27].
Effects of habitat and study year on species sampling success.
| Fixed effects | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | Standard error | T statistics | P | |
| (Intercept) | 1.6407 | 0.1668 | 9.834 | < 0.0001 |
| Elevation | -1.4995 | 0.2810 | -5.337 | < 0.0001 |
| Year | -1.0631 | 0.2043 | -5.204 | < 0.0001 |
| Pond | 0.4653 | 0.1801 | 2.583 | < 0.01 |
| Village | -1.0927 | 0.2681 | -4.075 | < 0.0001 |
| Secondary forest | -0.4467 | 0.1387 | -3.221 | < 0.01 |
| Primary forest | -0.7706 | 0.2234 | -3.450 | < 0.001 |
| Mountainous grassland | -0.2234 | 0.1392 | 1.605 | > 0.05 |
Independent variables included elevation, habitat categories (primary forest, secondary forest, strongly disturbed and open habitat, village, and mountainous grassland), study year, and the availability of ponds and streams. The study site was added as a random factor and the best-fit model is presented; a mixed-effect model analysis was conducted using function glmer.nb in package ‘lme4’ in R 3.1.1 [35], models were reduced stepwise backwards using AIC (maximum likelihood), ΔAIC = 4.8 (full model = 857.1, reduced model = 852.3).
Differences in sampling success and species occurrence before and after the first positive Bd record on Mt. Manengouba in 2011 and Mt. Oku in 2008.
| Before | After | Wilcoxon rank sum test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ± SD | n | Mean ± SD | N | P-value | ||
| Sampling Success | ||||||
| Mt. Manengouba | 1.44 ± 1.07 | 194 | 0.76±0.56 | 97 | 13946.5 | < 0.0001 |
| Mt. Oku | 0.70 ± 0.97 | 36 | 0.35±0.44 | 48 | 1058 | > 0.05 |
| Number of Species per Search Event | ||||||
| Mt. Manengouba | 3.74 ± 2.41 | 268 | 3.04±1.97 | 98 | 15258.5 | < 0.05 |
| Mt. Oku | 1.31 ± 086 | 99 | 0.88±1.09 | 94 | 6128 | < 0.0001 |
Given are the mean, standard deviation (mean ± SD), and sample size (n, search events) before and after Bd, and results of the Wilcoxon rank sum-test.
a number of species recorded per person-hour for each search event.
Fig 2Differences in detected anuran species between search events conducted before and after Bd-positive records in these study regions.
(A) Number of species per sampling event at Mt. Manengouba. (B) Sampling success (number of species recorded per person-hour for each search event at Mt. Manengouba. (C) Number of species per sampling event at Mt. Oku. (D) Sampling success at Mt. Oku. Boxplots depicting events before the detection of Bd in the region are shown as colored white, and those representing events after detection of Bd are shown as colored black. See Table 2 for statistical results and sample sizes
Fig 3Frequency of detection of selected frog genera and species during all study years on Mt. Manengouba.
Shown is the proportion of search events in which a genus (A-C) or a species (D-G) was present in a given year. The latter two bars show search events in which a genus or species was detected in all search events before and after the first recorded detection of Bd in the region (compare S3 Table). Bars showing events before the detection of Bd are colored white and those showing events after first detection of Bd are colored black. The number of search events was as follows: 2004 = 5; 2005 = 25; 2006 = 66; 2007 = 31; 2008 = 70; 2010 = 71; 2011 = 63; 2–12 = 35. Search events prior to detection of Bd = 366 and after detection of Bd = 98. For additional genus and species information, see S2 Fig.