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A popular «get well» card shows a racoon saying to a snake, «You wouldn’t get these stomach aches if you chewed your food properly.» Vets know, however, that indigestion in snakes and other reptiles often results not from swallowing food whole but from a parasitic infection. The gastrointestinal disease cryptosporidiosis represents a particularly severe problem: although it is rarely otherwise serious in mammals, reptiles seem especially prone to it and the condition is often fatal. Furthermore it is highly contagious, so early diagnosis would represent a good way to limit its spread among reptiles. Unfortunately, though, diagnosis is extremely difficult. Leer más.

Amphibian populations around the world are facing twin threats: habitat loss and the fungal disease chytridiomycosis. Unfortunately, solving one problem may exacerbate the other — it seems pristine habitats hold the greatest risk of the disease, according to research published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Leer más.