Mother Earth Network, 2/13/18
Romeo is a Sehuencas water frog,
and he is quite possibly the only member of his species alive today. Possibly.
Researchers haven't given up hope
and are using this Valentine's Day to tug on our heartstrings to help find
Romeo a lover.
In an odd-yet-perfect
collaboration, Global Wildlife Conservation, Match — the world’s largest
relationship company — and the Bolivian Amphibian Initiative have teamed up on
a fundraising campaign to find a mate for Romeo. The goal is to get researchers
in the field to find out if any other Sehuencas water frogs exist, and if any
do, to find a potential mate.
Romeo has his own dating profile on Match, and the
campaign aims to raise $15,000 by Valentines Day, money that will be used to
fund 10 field expeditions by the Bolivian Amphibian Initiative. From basic
field equipment to transportation and guides, the funds will be essential in
the search for individuals and to keep this species in existence.
"When biologists collected
Romeo 10 years ago, we knew the Sehuencas water frog, like other amphibians in
Bolivia, was in trouble, but we had no idea we wouldn’t be able to find a
single other individual in all this time," said Arturo Muñoz, founder of
the Bolivian Amphibian Initiative and GWC associate conservation scientist.
"Romeo started to call for a mate about a year after he was brought into
captivity, but those calls have slowed in the last few years. We don’t want him
to lose hope, and we continue to remain hopeful that others are out there so we
can establish a conservation breeding program to save this species.”
You don't have to kiss this frog
to help him
Romeo has been calling out for a
mate — to no avail. (Photo: Dirk Ercken and Arturo Muñoz/Global Wildlife
Conservation)
Match will match each donation
from Feb. 9 until Valentine’s Day. While that day might seem like a cute
publicity push, there’s a reason for gaining funds as soon as possible. The
species has faced a severe decline through combination of climate change,
habitat loss, pollution, the deadly chytrid amphibian pathogen, and the
introduction of trout. And now may come the final blow.
According to GWC, "The
Bolivian government plans to build a dam in a forested area where the Sehuencas
water frog was once so common it became its namesake: Sehuencas. In addition to
looking for Sehuencas water frog adults and tadpoles, the expedition team will
test the water of streams and rivers at key sites for traces of DNA from the
frogs, confirming that they are there to be found even if team members don’t
see them immediately.”
Finding and conserving any
Sehuencas water frog individuals is critical before the dam goes up. And who
wouldn't want to help preserve a species with such a sweet face?
Since 2010, Romeo has lived in an
aquarium in a shipping-container-turned-amphibian-ark in the Museo de Historia
Natural Alcide d’Orbigny in Cochabamba City, Bolivia. It's been a lonely life.
So if you'd like to help out Romeo and the entire species, visit Romeo's profile and make
a donation toward the scientific expeditions.
The Sehuencas water frog isn't
the only amphibian species in need of protection. As a highly sensitive
indicator species, frogs around the world have faced severe declines for the
same reasons: pollution, habitat loss, and the chytrid amphibian pathogen. The
loss of frogs indicates
the decline of an ecosystem.
If you'd like to learn more about
the importance of frogs and help preserve all amphibians, explore information
and conservation resources at Global
Wildlife Conservation and Amphibian
Survival Alliance.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!