%0 Journal Article %T Presence of amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis and other amphibian pathogens at Warm-water fish hatcheries in Southeastern North America %A David Earl Green %A C. Kenneth Dodd %A Jr. %J Herpetological Conservation and Biology %D 2007 %I Herpetological Conservation and Biology %X We conducted health screenings for infectious diseases of amphibians at four warm-water fish hatcheries and onenational wildlife refuge in the southeastern United States. We confirmed the presence of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis(amphibian chytrid fungus) in Rana catesbeiana (Bullfrog) from one hatchery; as well as, potentially new species ofmicrosporidian and myxozoan parasites infecting all 10 amphibian species sampled. Viruses were not found in tissuecultures or histologically. Tens of thousands of individual amphibians may breed in outdoor warm water fish-rearing ponds.Although there have been no reports of disease outbreaks at the sampling sites, the potential transmission of infectiousdiseases between amphibians and fishes could have serious consequences for amphibian populations at recipient sites. %K amphibians %K larvae %K tadpoles %K Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis %K disease %K chytrids %K epidemiology %K fish hatchery %K aquaculture %K frogs %K parasites %U http://www.herpconbio.org/Volume_2/Issue_1/Green_Dodd_2007.pdf