Frogs aren't given much thought in the
popular media. Their story is one that stretches back to the days of Pangaea,
but it's coming to an end.
The Golden Frog is an amazing creature;
its skin produces a toxin so powerful, a single gram of it could kill 100,000
people. But there's not a single one left in the wild. Then there's the Chile
Darwin frog. Did you know the males of this species incubate their tadpoles in
their vocal sacs for 60 days until they cough up their young? However, searches
in its habitat have shown no sign the frog still exists. It's believed to be
extinct.
It's the same story for many amphibians
across the world. The Book of Frogs may be one of
many books commemorating them as they slip into history, and of only a small
portion (600 out of the 7,000 known species) of these amazing creatures.
Author Timothy Halliday provided his
motivation for putting this book together, writing, “As frogs
increasingly make headlines for their troubling worldwide decline, the
importance of these fascinating creatures to their ecosystems remains
underappreciated.”
"Intense human pressure, both direct
and indirect, is having profound effects on natural environments. The
amphibians — frogs, salamanders, and caecilians — may be the only major group
currently at risk globally.”
Researchers believe we're entering a sixth extinction
event caused primarily by climate change, though other factors also
contribute — all directly related to human activities. What's so interesting is
that amphibians have endured through
the last four mass extinctions.
Here's a map showing the distribution and
diversity of these amphibian species “using density-equalizing cartograms.
Country size is distorted in proportion to the total number of amphibian
species occurring in each country relative to its size.”
It's the chytrid outbreaks that seem to
be causing these mass extinctions. The fungus kills by blocking the frog's
ability to take in water and
electrolytes through its skin. It's been found in Central America,
South America, North America, and Australia .
Why it has appeared in these distant
parts of the world is uncertain, but scientists have two hypotheses. Both
involve human influence. There's the “Out of Africa” idea, which suggests the
shipment of African clawed frogs, which are widely infected but unaffected by
chytrid, may have introduced the fungus to many new environments around the
globe. (African clawed frogs were used as a pregnancy test back in the 1950s
and '60s). Then there's the “frog leg soup” hypothesis, where North American
frogs where introduced to Europe, Asia, and South America
for human consumption. (Not all of them may have made it into the cooking pot.)
The species who survive this blight will
live out their lives in laboratories.
"We've got hope that somehow it's
all going to come together," herpetologist Paul Crump told Elizabeth
Kolbert, author of The Sixth
Extinction. "We've got to hope that something will happen, and we'll be
able to piece it all together, and it will all be as it once was, which now
that I say it out loud sounds kind of stupid."
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