Tadpoles might grow faster to flee viruses in their pond

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Image 4. Credit: Billet, et al (2025)
Image 4. Credit: Billet, et al (2025)

Tadpoles may try to beat dangerous viruses by growing much faster than normal, according to US researchers,  who studied the effects of a deadly disease called ranavirus, on populations of wood frog tadpoles. The team looked at the growth and development of the tadpoles in a forest in Connecticut, where they grow in ponds formed from snowmelt. They found that tadpoles that grew in ponds where the ranavirus was present would grow significantly faster over the first month of life, which they believe is a tactic to try to out-pace the disease. They found that in ponds where mass die-offs did not occur, the tadpoles had developed significantly faster and several stages ahead of tadpoles in uninfected ponds. The authors conclude that tadpoles respond to the presence of ranavirus by speeding up their growth rate and progressing through successive developmental stages faster early in life.

Media release

From: Frontiers

Title: Tadpoles try to flee dangerous virus in their pond by growing much faster than normal

Subtitle: Larvae of wood frogs respond to presence of deadly ranavirus by growing and maturing precociously

Summary: Researchers from the US studied the plasticity in growth and development of wood frog larvae in response to the emerging disease ranavirus, which can kill off the entire population of ponds. They showed that tadpoles in infected ponds speed up the rate of growth and progression through the immature stages. They hypothesize that this plasticity boosts their physical condition and hence immune response to ranavirus, and allows them to metamorphose earlier and escape infection.

Main text: The world’s amphibians are in trouble. Because of their sensitivity to climate change, habitat loss, and pollution, they may be the canary in the coalmine for the nascent anthropogenic mass extinction. Approximately 200 amphibian species have become extinct since the 1970s, and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature estimates that 34% of the 7,296 known remaining species are likewise at risk.

Another reason why amphibians are vulnerable is their susceptibility to disease. An emerging, potentially deadly disease of frogs and salamanders is ranavirus, a genus of at least seven species within the family Iridoviridae. Ranavirus can rapidly jump from host to host among fish, amphibians, and reptiles: a flexibility that can have catastrophic consequences, if new host species haven’t yet evolved any immunity.

But as a new study in Frontiers in Amphibian and Reptile Science has now shown, amphibians aren’t entirely defenseless against ranavirus.

“Here we show that in response to ranavirus, wood frog tadpoles change their growth, development, and resource allocation. This may help tadpoles tolerate the energetic demands of infection or escape risky environments to avoid infection entirely,” said Logan Billet, a PhD student at Yale University and the study’s first author.

Ranavirus has been implicated in 40 to 60% of amphibian die-offs in the US. Infected larvae stop feeding and become lethargic, while swimming abnormally and bleeding internally. An outbreak often leads to the death of all larvae in a pond, and there is evidence that outbreaks are becoming more frequent due to climate change.

Small frog in a big pond

Between 2021 and 2023, the authors studied the growth and development of the wood frog Rana sylvatica in a forest in Connecticut. Wood frogs are so-called ‘explosive’ breeders in ponds formed from snowmelt. They compared three pond types: 35 which remained free from ranavirus over an entire season; seven which contained some infected tadpoles but saw little or no mortality; and five with an outbreak that killed off the entire cohort.

From mid-April to mid-July, the researchers regularly visited ponds to estimate the number of live and dead individuals. They collected up to 20 tadpoles from each and humanely euthanized them. In the laboratory, they determined the presence or absence of ranavirus in the liver of 1,583 of these with quantitative real-time PCR. They also measured the total length of 4,299 tadpoles and determined their developmental stage – the so-called Gosner stage, which ranges from zero for embryos to 42 for tadpoles on the brink of metamorphosis.

Because of the life-history plasticity common to many amphibians, growth and development can vary independently: for example, tadpoles may grow slowly and thus be smaller than average, yet relatively large for their Gosner stage due to lagging development.

The results showed that tadpoles in ‘die-off’ ponds at first grew significantly faster, which led to a larger body size over the first month of life. Tadpoles also matured faster in die-off ponds, being on average 0.38 stages ahead in their development. But once mass mortality started, the rate of growth and development in these pools crashed, so that they were overtaken in body size and stage by those in uninfected or uninfected ponds, and ended up small for their stage at their death from the disease.

Similarly, in infected ponds that ultimately saw no die-off, tadpoles grew significantly faster and developed precociously over the first month of life, so that they were larger in body size as well as on average 1.7 Gosner stages ahead of tadpoles in uninfected ponds.

Being frogmarched throughout development

The authors conclude that tadpoles respond to the presence of ranavirus by speeding up their growth rate and progressing through successive developmental stages faster early in life.

“Accelerating growth and resource allocation early on may allow tadpoles to improve their physical condition, and thus the strength of their immunity, in anticipation of infection. They might also metamorphose and move onto land earlier, potentially reducing their exposure to ranavirus,” said senior author Dr David Skelly, a professor at the Peabody Museum and Billet’s doctoral supervisor.

“These responses are likely to give tadpoles a survival advantage. We hypothesize

they are the reason why mortality wasn’t always 100%, but only partial in some outbreaks in our study.”

“What we don’t yet know is how tadpoles detect ranavirus in their environment, for example through chemical or visual cues, and how effective these responses improve survival or tolerance of infection. Controlled experiments will be important to address these questions,” said Billet.

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Journal/
conference:
Frontiers in Amphibian and Reptile Science
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Yale University, USA
Funder: We thank Claire E. Schraidt for substantial help with the conceptualization of Figure 1, Adriana Rubinstein, Dr. L. Kealoha Freidenburg, Carolyn Skotz, and Karinne Tennenbaum for their assistance with fieldwork, AR, KT, and CS for their assistance with labwork, and Yara Alshwairikh, Dr. David Klinges, Julia Portmann, Samantha Tracy, CES, LKF, and AR for early reviews of this manuscript. Animal handling was approved by Yale University IACUC protocol 2019-10361 and 2022-10361. Specimens were collected under CT DEEP Permit 0124002. Field surveys were conducted with permission from Yale Myers Research Committee (BILL21).
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