Abrahm
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2005
- Messages
- 1,462
- Reaction score
- 47
- Points
- 48
- Location
- Saint Paul, MN
- Country
- United States
First in a petri dish and now on live salamanders, probiotic bacteria seem to repel a deadly fungus being blamed for worldwide amphibian deaths and even extinctions. Though the research is in its early stages, scientists are encouraged by results that could lead the way to helping threatened species like mountain yellow-legged frogs of the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern California.
...
Experiments have shown that Pedobacter cryoconitis, bacteria found naturally on the skin of red-backed salamanders, wards off the deadly chytridiomycosis fungus. In late 2004, Australian researchers cited chytridiomycosis as one of the main factors imperiling up to one third of the world's amphibian populations.
Full story here.
Really interesting story that I saw Wes didn't post yet even though it is from May
My supervisor was an attendee at the general meeting where they presented their preliminary data so I am hoping to be able to provide the abstract for this also. I don't believe that the actual study has been published yet but I'd love to be proven wrong.