A lethal fungal pathogen, Bsal, is on the brink of invading North America, threatening to annihilate the continent’s unparalleled salamander biodiversity. With the international pet trade as a likely vector, scientists are deploying urgent biosecurity protocols and mobilizing public surveillance to avert a looming ecological disaster.

In March 2026, herpetology enthusiast Sal Cincotta photographed an unfamiliar, pinkish amphibian in a Massachusetts pond. The creature wasn’t native—it was an Iberian ribbed newt, a species indigenous to Spain and Portugal. This seemingly minor sighting triggered a high-stakes biosecurity alert. Amphibian disease biologist Evan Grant of the U.S. Geological Survey identified the species as a potential carrier of Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (Bsal), a fungus that has already devastated European salamander populations and could now be at North America’s doorstep.
Bsal is not a hypothetical threat. First detected in the Netherlands in 2013, it has caused over 90% declines in some European fire salamander populations. Laboratory studies confirm that many North American species are highly susceptible, with mortality occurring in under two weeks. The eastern United States, hosting over 100 salamander species, is a global epicenter of salamander diversity. In Virginia forests alone, red-backed salamanders can reach densities of four individuals per square meter, surpassing the biomass of deer, mice, coyotes, and hawks combined.
Ecological Linchpins at Risk
Salamanders are not just abundant; they are ecological keystones. As both predators and prey, they transfer energy through food webs. Their consumption of leaf-litter invertebrates helps regulate carbon cycling. One California salamander species alone sequesters an estimated 72 metric tons of carbon annually, preventing its release into the atmosphere according to research in the Ecological Society of America’s journal. The loss of salamanders could trigger cascading ecosystem failures, from forest health to carbon balance.
Pet Trade: The Primary Pathway
The most probable introduction route for Bsal is the legal amphibian pet trade. In response to the threat, the U.S. federal government banned the import of 201 salamander species in 2016, expanding to 164 more in early 2025 as documented in the Federal Register. The Iberian ribbed newt, like the one found by Cincotta, is on this list. However, the U.S. still imports approximately four million amphibians yearly for pets and food markets, many sourced from the wild without mandatory disease screening. “There’s no required disease monitoring for amphibians,” notes veterinarian Susanna Masecar of Washington State University, who studies Bsal in captive settings.
- Pathogen-free certification: Researchers and breeders are developing a certification program for U.S.-bred salamanders to assure buyers of disease-free stock through initiatives like Healthy Trade, with studies indicating consumer willingness to pay premiums for such guarantees.
- Asymptomatic carriers: Even visibly healthy salamanders can harbor Bsal, making visual inspections unreliable and underscoring the need for molecular testing.
Rapid Response and Public Vigilance
Early detection is critical. The Bsal Taskforce, an international scientific collaboration, has sampled over 10,000 North American salamanders without finding the fungus—a reassuring but fragile status. “It’s not a question of if Bsal arrives, but when,” warns Deanna Olson of the U.S. Forest Service. The Massachusetts incident, though a false alarm—testing revealed no Bsal in native eastern newts—provided a crucial drill for response protocols.
Scientists rely on public reports. Grant urges citizens to document dead or sick amphibians via the Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation (PARC) alert system. “They can disseminate information to a network of biologists who can intervene,” he says. Cincotta’s social media post directly enabled a rapid field investigation, demonstrating the power of citizen science.
The Imperative for Immediate Action
Bsal’s potential arrival represents one of the most significant biodiversity threats facing North America. Unlike the already catastrophic chytrid fungus (Bd) affecting frogs, Bsal specifically targets salamanders, exploiting a continent with no evolved resistance. The window for prevention is narrowing, but not closed. Enhanced import screening, industry-led certification, and robust public reporting networks form a three-pronged defense.
The Massachusetts near-miss was a warning shot. Without sustained vigilance, the next sighting could mark the beginning of an irreversible decline. As Olson emphasizes, “Collaborations among the public, industry, resource managers, and scientists are critical. That’s what it’s going to take to prevent the next biodiversity crisis.”
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