Showing posts with label frog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frog. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Due to #estrogen in #water supplies, #frogs have even been shown to change sex, or become hermaphroditic. Scientists found female eggs in the testicles of many male frogs in suburban areas. - http://clapway.com/2015/09/08/estrogen-male-frogs123/

A news study has found that ponds in suburban areas have almost twice the proportion of female frogs to male frogs than isolated, forest-bound ponds. The estrogen in suburban wastewater disrupts frogs’ reproductive systems, causing them to spawn far more female frogs than male frogs, and in effect, threatens the entire species and ecosystem.


The study was done by Yale University and compared the proportions of frog sexes between 21 suburban ponds and isolated ponds in southwestern Connecticut. Its findings were published in the latest issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


End of an Era for Male Frogs


In the wild, the study found, male frogs outnumber female frogs, accounting for almost 60 percent of the frog population. But in suburban areas, it’s a different story: female frogs account for more than 60 percent of frog populations, nearly doubling the rate of male frogs.


Some of these frogs have even been shown to change sex, or become hermaphroditic. Scientists found female eggs in the testicles of many male frogs in suburban areas.


So What’s Causing This? Suburban Housewives?


Actually, the estrogen that is bringing about so many female frogs has nothing to do with the female humans who live nearby. But it has everything to do with clovers.


Clovers? Yes, clovers are just one of several common lawn plants that naturally produce “phytoestrogens.” When plants like clovers occur in unnatural concentrations as they do in the grassy suburbs, phytoestrogen levels in water become high enough to alter the biology of water-bound animals.


Amphibians are especially susceptible. While the study focused on green frogs as a common North American amphibian species, the same results are predicted for toads, newts, and salamanders. Further studies will investigate whether these phytoestrogens are even affecting the reproduction of birds and mammals.


Burn the Clovers! Burn Them All!


Well, it’s not that simple. The problem is, clovers and other lawn flora are not the only things causing frogs to birth females at such high rates; they are only the most surprising discovery of the study.


A dearth of male frogs had already been observed in ponds surrounding commercial farms and sewage treatment plants. The cause: pesticides, mostly. This latest study of suburban ponds was designed to see whether pesticide usage was high enough in suburban areas to affect frog sex. It accidentally discovered the phytoestrogen, reaching the ominous conclusion that simply having a lawn is a threat to frog and amphibian populations, pesticide or not.


Well Good Riddance, We’ve Had Enough of Men Already!


I would like to agree, because I think that we males don’t do a whole lot of good for the world. But there’s one thing you can count on us for: having sex with females. If we got rid of men, we’d have about 80 years of world peace until all the women died off. Tempting, but impractical.


It’s the same story for frogs. If we don’t find a way to reverse these falling rates of male frog births, we may be saying goodbye to our ribbit-ing friends and the entire ecosystems they support.


What do you think is the solution to this male frog crisis? Share your wisdom!



Not the male frogs! Lend Mother Nature a helping hand and preserve it while you can:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vD63kwQuZ2I



Estrogen in Wastewater Bad News for Male Frogs

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