Abstract

Reports of severe disease outbreaks in amphibian communities in mainland Europe due to strains of the common midwife toad virus (CMTV)-like clade of Ranavirus are increasing and have created concern due to their considerable population impacts. In Great Britain, viruses in another clade of Ranavirus–frog virus 3 (FV3)-like—have caused marked declines of common frog (Rana temporaria) populations following likely recent virus introductions. The British public has been reporting mortality incidents to a citizen science project since 1992, with carcasses submitted for post-mortem examination, resulting in a long-term tissue archive spanning 25 years. We screened this archive for ranavirus (458 individuals from 228 incidents) using molecular methods and undertook preliminary genotyping of the ranaviruses detected. In total, ranavirus was detected in 90 individuals from 41 incidents focused in the north and south of England. The majority of detections involved common frogs (90%) but also another anuran, a caudate and a reptile. Most incidents were associated with FV3-like viruses but two, separated by 300 km and 16 years, involved CMTV-like viruses. These British CMTV-like viruses were more closely related to ranaviruses from mainland Europe than to each other and were estimated to have diverged at least 458 years ago. This evidence of a CMTV-like virus in Great Britain in 1995 represents the earliest confirmed case of a CMTV associated with amphibians and raises important questions about the history of ranavirus in Great Britain and the epidemiology of CMTV-like viruses. Despite biases present in the opportunistic sample used, this study also demonstrates the role of citizen science projects in generating resources for research and the value of maintaining long-term wildlife tissue archives.

Highlights

  • Viruses in the genus Ranavirus present a substantial disease risk to amphibian populations in Europe [1,2,3]

  • Common frog populations in Great Britain have been severely affected by Ranavirus for approximately three decades and mortality incidents in GB have previously been assumed to result only from infection with Frog virus 3 (FV3)-like viruses [2,24]

  • common midwife toad virus (CMTV)-like viruses are emerging among amphibian populations in mainland Europe and have driven declines across a broad range of hosts [1,3]

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Summary

Introduction

Viruses in the genus Ranavirus present a substantial disease risk to amphibian populations in Europe [1,2,3]. Ranaviruses are large double-stranded DNA viruses (family Iridoviridae) which can cause fatal disease in a broad range of ectothermic vertebrates and which have been included on the World Organisation for Animal Health’s list of notifiable pathogens since 2009 [4,5,6]. Signs of disease can be severe and include systemic haemorrhage, skin ulceration. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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