Showing posts with label amphibians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amphibians. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

#Amphibians have real, tactile places in our ecosystem. Listen up and save the wee #tadpoles. - http://clapway.com/2015/08/12/new-parasite-threatens-to-wipe-out-tadpole-population-567/

The tadpole population worldwide is vulnerable to extinction due to a deadly parasitic infection, lending further credence to the sixth mass extinction event. Frogs from six countries spanning three continents were tested in a study led by the University of Exeter and The National History Museum, UK. Tadpole were from both temperate and tropical regions, including oceanic islands, were found to have this infection. The newly discovered parasite is a type of protist — a mostly unicellular organism with its own nucleus and a distant relative of the Perkinsea. Protists are responsible for mass mortality of shellfish populations. Evidently, protists are largely found in aquatic environments.


THE SCARCITY OF AMPHIBIANS


Amphibians are one of the most threatened animal groups in the world. “In 2008, 32% were listed as threatened or extinct, and 42% were listed as in decline.” Amphibians, and frogs in particular, are known to be extremely sensitive to infectious diseases; these have often been linked to mass decline and extinctions seen in their population.


POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION


In the study, a total of 182 tadpoles representative of different families of frogs over the geographical area were examined. The infectious parasite detected in this study was found to be present primarily in the livers of tadpoles. The DNA obtained from tadpole livers was amplified and analyzed using a common laboratory technique called the polymerase chain reaction. This molecular method allows sequencing of the parasitic DNA. The sequences obtained from all the samples of tadpoles were aligned to find any repetitive patterns and were then mapped to known DNA databases to trace the ancestral origin of this unknown parasite. This exercise revealed the similarity of the protists infecting the tadpoles to the Perkinsea species. These also had very few differences from another type of protist that was recently linked to mass mortality events in tadpoles in the United States. Another notable fact in that this parasitic infection is rampant in various stages of tadpole development, not just concentrated to a single one.


Do We Want To Live in A World Without Frogs?


It is imperative that future studies address the mechanism of how the new parasite inflicts its damage, which might give a clue to curbing the outbreak. Frogs do seem to have a thumb on what could be tipping the balance of our ecosystem. We should pay more attention to what they’re trying to say.



 


Check out some frogs and tadpoles with SnailVR:




New Parasite Threatens to Wipe Out Tadpole Population

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Extremely Endangered Gopher Frogs Released in Mississippi - http://clapway.com/2015/06/14/extremely-endangered-gopher-frogs-released-in-mississippi-567/

The dusky gopher frog, also known as the Mississippi gopher frog, has been on the endangered species list since 2001. It is now considered to be critically endangered, just one step away from being completely extinct in the wild. The Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge in Gautier has released over a thousand dusky gopher frogs into the wild since May in the hopes of allowing the species to repopulate. On Friday, June 12th, the refuge released a batch of 56 of them, making the total number 1,074. The frog population originated in Saucier, Harrison County, but was relocated to the refuge in order to allow oversight and eventual release into the wild.


 


Shrinking wet-pine savannah to blame for depopulation of gopher frogs.


The gopher frogs are threatened mainly not by their numerous natural predators, but by a rapidly shrinking ecosystem. According to Melissa Perez, a ranger at Sandhill Crane, the savannah that the refuge is located on is itself endangered and shrinking. This is a most unfortunate occurrence to ecologists, as the refuge is now home to two critically endangered species- the gopher frogs and the Mississippi sandhill crane that became the refuge’s namesake.


 


Frogs are hatched in Saucier, monitored at Sandhill Crane, then released into wild.


The gopher frogs being saved at the wildlife refuge hatched in Saucier, a few miles away. While in the tadpole stage, they’re transferred to the refuge, where they’re split up and placed into one of fifty tanks containing simulated natural habitat materials- water, pine straw, and sweet gum leaves. Once they reach adulthood and become frogs, they are fitted with tracking devices on their left legs, taken to Vancleave, Mississippi, and turned loose. The tracking devices will be used to monitor the frogs’ progress, though any measurable success is a few years off.


 


Success or failure of amphibians’ relocation won’t be known for a while.


While the gopher frogs’ relocation process only takes a few months from hatching to release, it will be a few years before any progress can be gauged. Male specimens become mature reproductively at the age of just one, but the females don’t reach fertility until between two and four years of age. Therefore, the earliest signs of success or failure are at least two years away.



 


 


 


Working out in the field? Check out the Moleskine Voyageur Traveller’s notebook.




Extremely Endangered Gopher Frogs Released in Mississippi