Atlantic Sea Turtle Population Threatened by Egg Infection
ScienceDaily (Oct. 29, 2010) — An international team of mycologists and 
ecologists studying 
Atlantic sea turtles at Cape Verde have discovered that the species is under 
threat from a fungal 
infection which targets eggs. The research, published in FEMS Microbiology 
Letters, reveals how 
the fungus Fusarium solani may have played a key role in the 30-year decline in 
turtle numbers.


"In the past 30 years we have witnessed an abrupt decline in the number of 
nesting beaches of sea 
turtles worldwide," said Drs. Javier Diéguez-Uribeondo and Adolfo Marco from 
Consejo Superior de 
Investigaciones Cientificas- CSIC Spain. "While many of the reasons for this 
are related to the 
human impact of the costal environment it has been suspected that the decline 
is also due to 
pathogenic microorganisms."
Fusarium solani is a complex fungal strain which represents over 45 
phylogenetic and biological 
species. The fungus is distributed through soil and can cause serious plant 
diseases. The fungus is 
known to have infected at least 111 plant species spanning 87 genera and has 
also been shown to 
cause disease in other animals with immunodeficiency.
During embryonic development turtle eggs spend long periods covered by sand 
under conditions 
of high humidity and warm temperatures, which are known to favor the growth of 
soil-born fungi.
Dr Diéguez-Uribeondo's team focused their study on the loggerhead sea turtle 
(Caretta caretta) 
population on Boavista Island, Cape Verde, off the West African coast. While 
Boavista Island 
represents one of the most important nesting regions for this species a high 
hatching failure rate is 
driving population numbers down.
The team sampled egg shells with early and severe symptoms of infection, as 
well as diseased 
embryos from sea turtle nests located in Ervatao, Joao Barrosa and Curral Velho 
beaches and 
discovered 25 isolates of F. solani associated with egg mass mortalities.
Although this fungal species has been previously described in association with 
different infections 
in animals, its relationship to hatching failure had not been investigated 
before this study.
The finding that strains of F. solani may act as a primary pathogen in 
loggerhead sea turtles 
represents an extremely high risk to the conservation of loggerhead sea turtles 
across the area.
However, the description of these particular fungal strains causing this 
infection may help in 
developing conservation programs based on artificial incubation and may aid the 
development of 
preventative methods in the field to reduce or totally erase the presence of F. 
solani in turtle nests.
"This work reveals that a strain of F. solani is responsible for the symptoms 
observed on turtle 
nesting beaches," concluded Dr Diéguez-Uribeondo. "This shows that the 
infection represents a 
serious risk for the survival of this endangered species, while also showing 
immunologists and 
conservationists where to focus their research."

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