posted on 2025-08-01, 00:05authored byAA Cunningham, F Smith, TJ McKinley, MW Perkins, LD Fitzpatrick, ON Wright, B Lawson
Whether an infectious disease threat to wildlife arises from pathogen introduction or the increased
incidence of an already-present agent informs mitigation policy and actions. The prior absence of a
pathogen can be difcult to establish, particularly in free-living wildlife. Subsequent to the epidemic
emergence of the fungus, Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (Bsal), in mainland Europe in 2010 and
prior to its detection in captive amphibians in the United Kingdom (UK), we tested archived skin swabs
using a Bsal-specifc qPCR. These samples had been collected in 2011 from 2409 wild newts from ponds
across the UK. All swabs were negative for Bsal. Bayesian hierarchical modelling suggests that Bsal
was absent from, or present at very low levels in, these ponds at the time of sampling. Additionally,
surveillance of newt mortality incidents, 2013–2017, failed to detect Bsal. As this pathogen has been
shown to be widespread in British captive amphibian collections, there is an urgent need to raise
awareness of the importance of efective biosecurity measures, especially amongst people with captive
amphibians, to help minimise the risk of Bsal spreading to the wild. Continued and heightened wild
amphibian disease surveillance is a priority to provide an early warning system for potential incursion
events
Funding
Animal & Plant Health Agency (APHA)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA)
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Notes
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