Australian
researchers have a new way to increase desire in the northern corroboree frog
Calla Wahlquist
Wed 5 Dec
2018 23.00 GMT Last modified on Wed 5 Dec 2018 23.03 GMT
Australian
researchers are applying a sex hormone to the skin of the
critically endangered northern corroboree frog in a
world-first treatment to encourage females to accept less desirable mates in
captivity.
A trial
conducted by the University of Wollongong and Taronga zoo found that, by
administering the hormone to both a male and female frog before pairing them
off, researchers could increase the chance that they would accept their
allocated partner from about 22% to 100%.
In a
world-first, the researchers put a few drops of the synthetic
gonadotrophin-releasing hormone on the frog’s stomach instead of using the
accepted technique of injecting the hormone under the skin.
It is the
same type of hormone used in IVF.
“Because frogs have highly permeable skin, the
hormone gets absorbed straight in,” lead researcher Dr Aimee Silla said. “It’s
extremely safe to use and we are really pleased with the outcome of these
trials because we’re hoping that this method of application will be adopted by
other amphibian breeding programs globally.”
Taronga
zoo’s northern corroboree frog population is drawn from a genetically isolated
wild population in the northern Brindabella Range, on the border of New South
Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.
Protecting
the genetic integrity of the wild population is a key aim of the captive
breeding program.
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