CONSERVATION: IUCN species of the day: The Luristan newt

Via greenroofsuk on Twitter

The Luristan newt is an amphibian jewel, but it’s incredible coloration has made it a target of the international pet trade. As a result, due to the pet trade in addition to habitat degradation, loss, and fragmentation, this little newt has been brought to near extinction. More via iucnredlist.org:

The Luristan Newt, Neurergus kaiseri, is listed as ‘Critically Endangered’ on the IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM. It is a small species, reaching only 13 cm in length, and is found in the Luristan Province of Iran. It is thought that the striking mosaic of black and white patches on its fiery orange dorsal stripe serve to warn potential predators of its toxicity.

The Luristan Newt is estimated to number fewer than 1,000 mature individuals. It is threatened by habitat loss, recent severe droughts and the damming of the few inhabited streams. The greatest current concern for this species, however, is the growing collection of wild individuals for the international pet trade.

This species is protected by Iranian national legislation, but immediate action is needed to prevent the illegal export of this attractive newt. Captive breeding programmes are being considered as a means of bolstering population numbers.

More species of the day

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank :: post to facebook

PIC TO SHARE: Some frogs bypass the tadpole stage

Oreophryne Frog Guarding FrogletsMoist environments in the tropics allow some frogs to forgo the tadpole stage and hatch directly into froglets. Another example of this adaptation can be found in the Bryophryne spp. of Peru. From National Geographic:

[A] male Oreophryne frog in Papua, New Guinea, guards his clutch and two newly hatched froglets that rest atop the egg mass. Like many of the Microhylidae family, these frogs bypass the tadpole stage, developing fully within the egg. Male frogs embrace their clutch each night to keep the eggs moist and protect them from predators such as insects.

See also: WEIRD & FASCINATING CREATURES: Certain species of frog give birth to young through the mouth

CRITICALLY ENDANGERED SPECIES: Mountain yellow-legged frog population discovered in California

Mountain Yellow-Legged FrogCertainly, the discovery of a new population of this critically endangered frog species represents some much needed good news from the amphibian world. According to the U.S. Geological Survey:

For the first time in nearly 50 years, a population of a nearly extinct frog has been rediscovered in the San Bernardino National Forest’s San Jacinto Wilderness. Biologists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) assessing suitability of sites to re-establish frogs and scientists from the San Diego Natural History Museum retracing a 1908 natural history expedition both rediscovered the rare mountain yellow-legged frog in the San Jacinto Wilderness near Idyllwild, Calif.

.       .       .

Prior to this recent discovery, USGS researchers had estimated there were about 122 adult mountain yellow-legged frogs in the wild.

.       .       .

“Historically, scientists have had great difficulty breeding frogs in captivity,” said Jeff Lemm, an animal research coordinator for the San Diego Zoo. “We are excited by this success and cautiously optimistic we will have more eggs soon.”

In December 2008, researchers at the Institute for Conservation Research discovered a clutch of about 200 eggs in one of its tanks. Researchers were surprised because the frogs were younger than is typical for breeding. Because of the frogs’ young age, only a handful of the eggs were fertile. The one frog to mature is thriving. The next breeding season is expected to be December 2009 to March 2010.

The goal of the breeding program is to return the mountain yellow-legged frog to its native habitat.

The Zoo’s breeding program, in conjunction with its partners, began after the rare frogs were rescued from a drying creek. Anne Poopatanapong, a wildlife biologist for the San Jacinto Ranger District in the San Bernardino National Forest was monitoring declining creek water levels in Dark Canyon on Aug. 23, 2006, when she noticed many pools drying up, including one where frogs had been living. Concerned about losing the tadpoles, she called the Fish and Wildlife Service and the salvage effort started the next day. A USGS team led by Dr. Robert Fisher rescued 82 tadpoles, which were taken to the San Diego Zoo’s Institute for Conservation Research.

The frog recovery effort has been funded by Caltrans in part to mitigate for emergency work to stabilize a slope near the frog’s habitat on state Route 330 in the San Bernadino Mountains.

“The emergency slope reconstruction project had the dual benefit of opening a road that was about to fail as well as helping to ensure that the last known population of the mountain yellow-legged frog in the San Bernardino Mountains had a program in place to aid the frog’s recovery,” said Craig Wentworth, a senior environmental planner/biologist with Caltrans.

Jim Bartel, the field supervisor for the Fish and Wildlife Service office in Carlsbad, said his agency is pleased to participate in the effort to rescue the mountain yellow-legged frog and conserve its remaining riparian habitat.

“We look forward to reintroducing the species to its native habitat,” Bartel said.

Habitat protection and restoration, combined with efforts to reintroduce these frogs to areas where they have been decimated, offers the best hope of returning mountain yellow-legged frogs in Southern California to a healthy, self-sustaining population.

Image by Adam Backlin for the U.S. Geological Survey

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank :: post to facebook

BIOSECURITY needed to protect vulnerable bat and frog populations, as two deadly fungal diseases devastate both group of animals—people are most likely helping these diseases spread

counties-with-white-nose-syndromeA voluntary caving moratorium is being issued to protect bats by preventing the spread of a deadly fungal disease that causes white-nose syndrome in bats. From the Straits Times:

US officials are asking people to stay out of caves in states from West Virginia to New England, where as many as 500,000 bats have died from a disease known as ‘white-nose syndrome’.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service made the request to guard against the possibility that people are unwittingly spreading the mysterious affliction when they explore multiple caves. There is no evidence that white nose is a threat to people.

Named for the sugary smudges of fungus on the noses and wings of hibernating bats, white-nose bats appear to run through their winter fat stores before spring.

It was confirmed in eight states this winter from New Hampshire to West Virginia and there is evidence it may have spread to Virginia, according to wildlife service spokeswoman Diana Weaver. Some death-count estimates run as high as 500,000 bats.

Researchers worry about a mass die-off of bats, which help control the populations of insects that can damage wheat, apples and dozens of other crops.

The advisory seeking a voluntary caving moratorium also would cover states adjacent to affected states – a swath of the United States stretching from Maine down to North Carolina and west to Tennessee, Kentucky and Ohio, Weaver said.

white-nose-syndrome

natterjack-toadThe iconic Natterjack toads (Epidalea calamita), which are “native to sandy and heathland areas of Northern Europe,” have been exposed to the chytrid fungus. From Scotland on Sunday:

Government scientists have found traces of chytrid fungus in Natterjack Toads along both the northern and southern shores of the Solway Firth, where populations have steeply declined in the past two years.

They are now calling for increased biosecurity measures around amphibian habitats to prevent other populations of frogs, toads and newts in Scotland succumbing to the disease.

Chytrid disease is caused by a fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) that infects the skin tissues of amphibians. It has already caused catastrophic declines and extinctions across Australia and the Americas.

.       .       .

SNH is now considering stricter biosecurity measures – such as disinfecting footwear and equipment – for people who come into contact with the toads. “We want to stop it from spreading to other species such as frogs, other toads and newts, which might be affected,” Thompson said.

The Natterjack Toad is one of only three amphibians protected under the UK’s national Biodiversity Action Plan. Numbers are already in decline through loss of habitat, and the effects of pollution.

leptodactylus-fallaxThe mountain chicken frog (Leptodactylus fallax) has been exposed to the chytrid fungus as well. From RedOrbit:

The “mountain chicken frog” of the tiny Caribbean island of Montserrat is the latest victim of a lethal fungal disease that is devastating amphibian populations throughout the world.

British researchers say that just two small pockets of mountain chicken frogs (Leptodactylus fallax) are all that remain disease-free on the entire island. Conservationists are working to take the surviving frogs, some of the world’s largest, into captive breeding programs.

Experts believe the chytrid fungus entered Montserrat on small frogs stowing away in consignments of produce from Dominica.

.       .       .

Events on Montserrat now appear to be repeating what occurred on Dominica in 2002, when 80 percent of the island’s mountain chicken frogs were devastated within 15 months of the fungus arriving.

The fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis), first identified over ten years ago, has spread through hundreds of amphibian species throughout the world. It some species, extinction results in a matter of months, while others are seemingly immune.

“We still don’t know how chytrid kills frogs, and there’s some very basic stuff about the biology of the fungus that we need to understand,” said Andrew Cunningham from the Zoological Society of London, in an interview with BBC News.

“We’ve known about it for 10 years, but so little money has been spent on it.

“If this was killing mammals or birds in the same way it’s killing amphibians, millions and millions would have been spent on it.”

Chemicals can be used to rid amphibians of the fungus in captivity, but there is currently no way to cure them in the wild, or to eradicate infected water bodies. Because of this, conservation groups are working towards establishing captive populations.

On the Net:

  1. White-Nose Syndrome in bats: Something is killing our bats
  2. White-Nose Syndrome: More information…
  3. NORTHEASTERN CAVE CONSERVANCY CLOSES CAVES TO COMBAT WHITE NOSE SYNDROME IN BATS
  4. Origin of the Amphibian Chytrid Fungus
  5. Chytrid fungus and chytridiomycosis

The map showing counties in the northeast and mid-Atlantic where white-nose syndrome has been found is courtesy of Cal Butchkoski, Pennsylvania Game Commission. The image showing bats with white-nose syndrome was found here. The Natterjack toad image is by Piet Spaans. The Leptodactylus fallax image was found here.

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank :: post to facebook