Researchers like Harris and Bletz continue to collect samples from the skin of frogs and salamanders to identify other probiotic bacteria that can fight chytrid. “We have a culture database of more than 7,000 bacteria,” Bletz says. “About 1,000 show strong antifungal properties.”
The next step is figuring out how to deploy these therapies in the wild. It’s unrealistic to bathe every amphibian around the world in a probiotic bath. “One thing we’re exploring is environmental augmentation,” Bletz says. It’s the idea of humans introducing bacteria to improve an environment. For instance, scientists could add a probiotic to a pond, where it would spread to the amphibian population to help reduce chytrid infections.
Before any of this happens, though, scientists first have to study how the introduction of probiotic bacteria would affect an ecosystem. “We would only increase bacteria that are naturally part of the environment,” explains Harris. “That would optimize the probiotics in the pond without impacting any other species.” It could take years to fully figure out this complicated puzzle, but hope for amphibians may be on the horizon.