4.2 Article

Fungicidal effects of chemical disinfectants, UV light, desiccation and heat on the amphibian chytrid Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis

Journal

DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS
Volume 57, Issue 3, Pages 255-260

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/dao057255

Keywords

Batrachochythum dendrobatidis; disinfectant; ultraviolet light; didecyl dimethyl ammonium chloride; DDAC; desiccation; sodium hypochlorite

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The efficacy of a number of disinfection treatments was tested on in vitro cultures of the fungus Batrachochythum dendrobatidis, the causative agent of chytridiomycosis in amphibians. The aim was to evaluate the fungicidal effects of chemical disinfectants, sterilising ultraviolet (UV) light, heat and desiccation, using methods that were feasible for either disinfection in the field, in amphibian husbandry or in the laboratory. The chemical disinfectants tested were: sodium chloride, household bleach (active ingredient: sodium hypochlorite), potassium permanganate, formaldehyde solution, Path-X-TM agricultural disinfectant (active ingredient: didecyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, DDAC), quaternary ammonium compound 128 (DDAC), Dithane, Virkon, ethanol and benzalkonium chloride. In 2 series of experiments using separate isolates of B. dendrobatidis, the fungicidal effect was evaluated for various time periods and at a range of chemical concentrations. The end point measured was death of 100% of zoospores and zoosporangia. Nearly all chemical disinfectants resulted in 100 % mortality for at least one of the concentrations tested. However, concentration and time of exposure was critical for most chemicals. Exposure to 70 % ethanol, 1 mg Virkon ml(-1) or I mg benzalkonium chloride ml-1 resulted in death of all zoosporangia after 20 s. The most effective products for field use were Path-X-TM and the quaternary ammonium compound 128, which can be used at dilutions containing low levels (e.g. 0.012 or 0.008%, respectively) of the active compound didecyl dimethyl ammonium chloride. Bleach, containing the active ingredient sodium hypochlorite, was effective at concentrations of 1 % sodium hypochlorite and above. Cultures did not survive complete drying, which occurred after <3 h at room temperature. B. dendrobatidis was sensitive to heating, and within 4 h at 37degreesC, 30 min at 47degreesC and 5 min at 60degreesC, 100 % mortality occurred. UV light (at 1000 mW m(-2) with a wavelength of 254 nm) was ineffective at killing B. dendrobatidis in culture.

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