Chytridiomycosis is a lethal disease of amphibians associated with mass mortalities and population declines worldwide. An accurate, non-invasive technique for detecting chytridiomycosis is urgently needed to determine the current geographical distribution of the disease, and its prevalence in wild amphibian populations. Herein we evaluate a recently devised, rapid, non-invasive, swab-PCR assay. We sampled 101 wild juvenile Mixophyes iteratus by both a skin swab for use in PCR analysis, and a toe-clip for examination by histological methods. The swab-PCR assay detected chytridiomycosis infection in a minimum of 14.9 % of frogs, whereas histology detected infection in no more than 6.9% of frogs. We conclude that the swab-PCR technique is the more reliable means of detecting chytridiomycosis in wild amphibians, and that it precludes the need for toe-clipping as a means of sampling for the presence of the disease in future surveys. Further, we document a significant negative relationship between a juvenile frog's snout-vent length and its likelihood of being infected with the disease. © Inter-Research 2006.
CITATION STYLE
Kriger, K. M., Hines, H. B., Hyatt, A. D., Boyle, D. G., & Hero, J. M. (2006). Techniques for detecting chytridiomycosis in wild frogs: Comparing histology with real-time Taqman PCR. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 71(2), 141–148. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao071141
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