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FLORA AND FAUNA
Galapagos home to 53 invasive species, 10 times previous estimates
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Mar 29, 2019

Scientists warn of pandemic endangering amphibians
Santiago (AFP) April 5, 2019 - A deadly disease affecting amphibians has descended into a global pandemic that has already wiped out 90 species, a prominent US biologist warned Thursday at the World Organisation for Animal Health Aquatic Conference in Santiago, Chile.

Chytridiomycosis is caused by a fungus -- Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis -- that attacks the skin of frogs, toads and other amphibians.

As the creatures use their skin to breathe and regulate their bodies' water levels, the damage caused by the disease eventually leads to heart failure and death.

Jonathan Kolby, co-author of a study published in March on the fungus' devastating effects, lamented what he described as "the first global wild disease issue."

"It's over 60 countries right now, and that's part of the problem," he said.

Over the past five years, the highly contagious disease has already caused nearly 90 species to disappear, with over 500 impacted.

The rapid global spread of the fungus is due to a lack of animal trade rules and airport surveillance, which allows wildlife to be imported without examination.

"To solve it we have to focus on regulation," said Kolby, who worked on the study alongside around 40 other international experts.

"Globalization is good for people but it has consequences to animals," he added. In the US alone, five million amphibians enter the country every year.

Currently, the disease is most widespread in Latin America and Australia, with trade with Asia -- where the fungus originated -- blamed for the spread.

Scientists also believe a genetic mutation of the fungus may have made it more dangerous.

Amphibians play a major role in maintaining aquatic environmental quality. They also feed on mosquitoes, which carry human diseases such as malaria and the Zika virus.

Stranded baby elephants rescued by Thai rangers
Bangkok (AFP) March 30, 2019 - Six baby elephants separated from their parents and trapped in a muddy pit for days have been rescued by park rangers in rural Thailand, officials said Saturday.

Patrolling rangers chanced upon the struggling herd in a national park east of Bangkok on Wednesday afternoon, park superintendent Prawatsart Chantheap told AFP.

Once the rangers realised the calves, aged between one and four years old, could not climb out of the dirty watering hole, some left the forest to bring back digging tools while others stayed overnight to keep watch over the frightened creatures.

"Our team arrived with hoes (on Thursday morning)... and we began to dig around the rim (of the mud pit) to make it less steep," he said.

After three hours of digging to build a makeshift ramp, the mud-covered babies managed to stumble out of the pit one-by-one as the rangers cheered them on.

"Go, go, follow each other!" the rangers yelled in a video recorded by the national parks department. "Go, children, go!"

Prawatsart said the rangers had observed a herd of 30 adult elephants nearby and believed the young calves must have been separated from them.

"We believe they were stuck there for at least two days because after they got out their legs were weak," he said.

Wild elephants are Thailand's national animal and live in the wild in parts of the country but their numbers have dwindled to about 2,700 from a peak of over 100,000 in 1850.

Deforestation and habitat loss has brought them in closer contact with humans in recent decades, and they often clash with villagers and farmers.

Elephants are also poached or domesticated for entertainment and tourism.

The Galapagos Islands hosts at least 53 invasive species, ten times as many as previously thought.

The survey was conducted by a team of scientists with the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Williams College and the Charles Darwin Foundation, and published this week in the journal Aquatic Invasions.

Researchers began their search for non-native species in 2015 by hanging underwater settlement plates from docks on Santa Cruz and Baltra, two the archipelago's larger islands. Scientists monitored the species that attached to and grew on the plates.

The team of ecologists also sampled mangrove roots, as well as searched previous studies of Galapagos invaders.

The survey revealed 48 non-native species, mostly sea squirts, marine worms and moss animals, or bryozoans. Of the 48 species, 30 were new. Another 17 of were previously described but erroneously thought to be native.

The final species, the bryozoan Watersipora subtorquata, was first found in 1987 but wasn't identified until now. James Carlton, an emeritus professor of the Maritime Studies Program of Williams College-Mystic Seaport, scraped the species off the hull of a boat more than two decades ago.

"I carefully stored them away and faithfully kept them all these years," Carlton told UPI. "The 2015 survey offered me the chance to get the samples in front of the eyes of some expert bryozoan taxonomists."

Researchers found the bryozoan species still growing near where Carlton had found it before.

"It's still there," Carlton said. "Had I not collected it in 1987, its arrival would have been dated 2015. An accurate history of invasive species in the region is hard to come by. What we're doing is establishing a new baseline."

Watersipora subtorquata is one of several bryozoan species detailed in the new study of Galapagos invaders. Most bryozoans form colonies, and some can grow quite large.

Another one of the colonial byrozoan species identified by Carlton and his research partners is Zoobotryon verticillatum, which was recently renamed Amathia verticillata. The species is sometimes called spaghetti bryozoan or spaghetti weed. In California and Europe, the invader is known for clogging pipes, fouling fishing gear and killing seagrasses.

"We've seen colonies of spaghetti weed measuring about three feet long and a foot wide, so it's an impressive colonial animal," Carlton said. "In Southern California, I've seen colonies measuring three by six."

"Especially with climate change, these are the kinds of species that are going to benefit from a warmer Galapagos," Carlton said.

Almost all of the non-native species now found in the Galapagos arrived on the bottoms of boats. Though tourist traffic has picked up in recent decades, researchers estimate the majority of invasive species make their way to Galapagos waters on the hulls of commercial shipping vessels. And with the expansion of the Panama Canal, the risk of invasion is increasing.

Conservationists are especially worried that the Indo-Pacific lionfish, currently wreaking havoc in the Caribbean, could make its way through the Panama Canal.

To prevent the arrival of the lionfish and other damaging invaders, Galapagos authorities have created an aggressive invasive species prevention program. All international vessels entering the Galapagos Marine Reserve are inspected by divers. If non-native species are spotted on a boat's hull, the vessel must leave and be cleaned before returning.

While the prevention program is a positive, Carlton said it isn't foolproof.

"A lot of these species begin their lifecycles as tiny organisms, sizes perhaps too small for underwater divers to spot," he said.

For some time, scientists have known non-native species are making their way to the Galapagos. In 2015, researchers realized they didn't have a great sense of the scale of the invasion.

"Now, we've kind of gotten the grasp on that," Carlton said. "The next step is to nail down what the impacts on the native species."


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FLORA AND FAUNA
US zoo to return beloved giant pandas to China
Los Angeles (AFP) March 26, 2019
Two giant pandas that have been a star attraction at the San Diego Zoo for decades will soon be returned home to China, officials announced. Bai Yun, the 27-year-old female giant panda, and her son, six-year-old Xiao Liwu, will be repatriated to their ancestral homeland in late April. "Although we are sad to see these pandas go, we have great hopes for the future," Shawn Dixon, chief operating officer for San Diego Zoo Global, said in a statement issued Monday. "Working with our colleagues in Ch ... read more

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