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Time to leap into the Year of the Frog!

Posted: Friday, February 29, 2008 2:49 PM

ATLANTA – While kissing a frog may not fit into your Leap Day celebration plans, you might find yourself visiting some in the near future.

More than 200 zoos, aquariums, and botanical gardens across the country, including the Atlanta Botanical Garden, are showcasing special exhibits in honor of the 2008 leap year, declaring it the Year of the Frog.

Image: Granular Glass Frog.
Ron Holt / Atlanta Botanical Gar
The Granular Glass Frog.

And even if you’re not kissing them, frogs and their cousins do need a little love. According to the Amphibian Ark organization, one third of the 6,000 amphibian species – frogs, toads, newts, salamanders - around the world are in decline or threatened.

Amphibians, say the organization, are an essential part of the global ecosystem and key indicators of overall health of the environment. Threats to these vulnerable creatures include habitat loss, climate change, pollution and disease.

When frog populations die off, it causes a disharmony in that ecosystem that disrupts the delicate balance of plants and animals. Amphibian Ark was formed to help protect the most critically endangered species through breeding programs.

Mission: save frogs
"Avoiding this mass extinction event represents what is thought to be the greatest challenge for conservation in our history," said Ron Gagliardo, chief amphibian conservation specialist at the Atlanta Botanical Garden.  

Image: Horned Marsupial Frog with young
Dr. Brad Wilson / Atlanta Botani
The Horned Marsupial Frog with young

Gagliardo and Joseph Mendelson, curator of herpetology at Zoo Atlanta, recently rescued nearly 150 frogs from a Central American rain forest before a fast-moving fungus could wipe them out.

Image:  Mysteriosus frog seen in Peru
Dr. Brad Wilson / Atlanta Botani
The Mysteriosus frog seen in Peru last week.

The two herpetologists (a fancy word for amphibian and reptile experts) spent two days in the rain forest in Panama collecting frogs and placing them in plastic deli containers for transport – in their suitcases! – to the United States.

Once back in Atlanta, Mendelson and Gagliardo went to work setting up a perfect frog world. In two short years, they have created nearly perfect environments where the once severely threatened frogs are happy and breeding. "We can administer certain hormones to frogs and predict within minutes when they will mate," explained Garliardo.

The program has been so successful that the pair is now sharing their offspring with zoos, aquariums and museums around the nation including the Bronx Zoo, the National Aquarium in Baltimore, the Como Zoo in St. Paul, Minneapolis, the Houston Zoo and Zoo Atlanta.

But they won’t just be staying in America – the plan is return a considerable number to their home environments as soon as it is safe. 

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Comments

I am gld to see someone is rescuing frogs.  I am concerned at all the species being bulldozed too for Carbon Credits..terrible price to pay to make a few rich people richer.  

But this is good news.  Congratulations!
The frogs are here to stay!  The ? is, are we the people?  Ask yourself, if this critical, ultimetly important issue, is as important to you & half of what your life, is ever going to be about, is important, as the frogs acually are?
Friendly clarification:
It is fantastic to see the recognition of Amphibian Ark's 2008 Year of the Frog and Leap Day Amphibian Activities. For the sake of accuracy, I would like to point out that the 2005 Panama amphibian rescue project was fully sanctioned by the Panamanian government and that while frogs were transported to the US in suitcases, the reality was that these were specially insulated cases that with ALL government and airline permissions, were graciously allowed to be discretely carried in the cabin of the plane. The reason they were brought at Atlanta in the first place was because at the critical time of disease outbreak in Panama, there was no facility in country to house and manage them. Many of these species acclimated well in Atlanta and while we began to breed them here, the Houston Zoo intiated and built a laboratory in country where the very last of some species are now being bred.  It is likely that any frogs being returned to the wild in Panama, if the circumstances allow, will be from this in country facility. We will continue to share our knowledge of keeping and breeding these species here in Atlanta with our Panamanian colleagues on an ongoing basis, a nice example of international collaboration to save amphibians!  
I LOVE FROGS! When I was just about to graduate from high school in 1967, there was a Large Bull Frog on my back porch, which I named Gil. I fed him all the freshly dead flies I could give him & he Loved them!Florida has lots of flies!! One day new baby frogs were on the porch & Gil was there, & ate those too, which upset me greatly..it surprised me that he would do this, But, I guess if you are hungry, it's the survival of the fitess, & he probably didn't know the difference of what he was eating....do you suppose?jgm
Thank goodness, someone is paying attention.  Our local effort to preserve habitat for the Pacific tree frog and endangered red-legged frog lasted for a few years, but succumbed to a resurvey (during a drought and before the seasonal rains came) and, now, suburb development.
To some it may seem a waste of money, but this is just one step closer to our extinction.  The more they can learn the better. Way to go people!
Thank you for this story. I've always thought frogs were neat. What's the story on the "mysterious"frog?
adorable! Frogs are wonderful, can't wait to see some exhibits.
My wife the ORIGINAL frog collector would be pleased she died last year and been collectin 40 years
how can I get frogs to live in my small garden?
Thought you would enjoy this
This was a beautiful and timely article about our early warning system:  Our frogs.

Thank you!

Peace
herbicides, pesticides, roadsalt and mosquito spraying has practically wiped out the frog population in the entire state of Minnesota.... disgusting.  Especially for a state that prides itself on great fresh water fish like the muskies and northern.....  
Its about time humans stopped worrying about nonsense and concentrated more on the environment!  For over the past two centuries, humans have taken over nature, imposing their will where we have no right!  Amphibians are dying in Central America, bee colonies are dying in the United States, and in the Arctic, polar bears are DROWNING!  Isn't this enough of a wake up call?!
I used to have frogs in my yard. Where have they all gone...Frogs (big ones) taste like chicken when fried. Lets farm more frogs...Makes good chicken feed. Save the frogs is the battle call....rh
A froggy went a courtin' and he did say...
At first, I thought this was an Chinese Calendar story, but I found this article very interesting.  Too bad they didn't publish where we could send donations and/or volunteer work.  In school, science was my favorite subject. I've tried to remind my family there are severe consequences and every action has a reaction. Lack of landfill sites and recycling= ocean dumps, concrete tubes of nuclear/toxic waste, bottled water and on faucet filters, really!!! We need to keep trying to learn about and teach everyone what (everything) and who (all of us)impact with our most seemingly insignificant actions taken as granted really effects. While we anxiously await the latest technology, we overlook the simpler choices.  Prevention leads Conservation.
GOD SAVE THE FROGS!  
thank god for these wonderful resourceful, caring scientists..i am green with envy that i wasnt with them saving these beautiful necessary creatures...i just want to say thanks to all those involved with this and similar actions aimed at saving our beautiful world....sincerely peter dearcangelis  p.s. its a shame that ALL the wealthy people in the world dont get together and use their money to do some REAL GOOD, like foe example..."purchase all precious real estate like rain forests and $pay its indigenous people to guard, protect and caretake for it" hooray for my dream and by the way that would create mountains of jobs.....
What about the deformed frogs in our country?  They have faded off the radar screen--but I never heard of any solution to the problem.


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