The Honnametti bush frog.
Credit: K. V. Gururaja
Bengaluru: 2/5/19 by Rishika
Pardikar The Wire
New birds and mammals aren’t
discovered that often. “But in the last 10 years, more than 100 new frog
species have been described from India,” said Kartik Shanker, an associate
professor at the Centre for Ecological Sciences, Bengaluru. So it’s “very valuable
to revise amphibian lists periodically.”
On January 18, the Zoological
Survey of India (ZSI) published
an updated list with details of the diversity of amphibian species in India,
together with their conservation status.
“We have been updating the list
every year since 2009,” said Dinesh K.P., of the ZSI’s Western Ghats Regional
Centre, which undertook the exercise.
Numerous taxonomic studies, and
other research projects, undertaken every year use it to track which
populations they need to study more, and why.
In effect, the list is a
government-authenticated document that collects all the available info on
India’s amphibian taxonomy. And the database used to build it, and which it
comes with, is a source of information for researchers, policymakers,
herpetologists and students.
It’s also important from an
international perspective because global databases consider only the big
picture, and aren’t particular about the finer details specific to each
country. With new species being found in India at a steady click, local
databases are more suited to track local changes.
“Country borders are a dicey
subject for global databases,” Dinesh agreed. Sometimes, he said, details about
some species come with caveats like ‘species available in China might also be
available in India’.
The list draws its nomenclature
from the Amphibian
Species of the World database. In 2009, it contained 284 species. Today,
the number stands at 432 thanks to the concerted efforts of amphibian
researchers across multiple biodiversity hotspots in the country to protect
these animals.
To Seshadri K.S., research
director of the Agumbe Rainforest Research Station (in Karnataka), the list is
a necessary accompaniment to the study of amphibians in the Internet Age.
He said that a handful of frog
species had been described during the colonial period. And in those days, they
“were described in journals, the descriptions were short and the specimens
were either housed in the Natural History Museum of London or they were lost.”
So until the journals could be
digitised, researchers were stuck with old publications and lax identification
processes. As a result, “we would see different-looking frogs but would call
them all by a [common] name.”
Now, with digitised publications
as well as new techniques like DNA analysis and tomography scans, researchers
are better equipped to identify distinct amphibian.
According to the new list, about
8% of amphibian species in India are endangered; 5% are vulnerable; 4% are
critically endangered; and 2%, near threatened.
But surprisingly, data about 19%
of species has been tagged ‘deficient’ and the conservation status of 39%
hasn’t even been assessed. That’s 58% of them in a ‘grey zone’ of sorts.
Seshadri pointed out a 2014 study
that said these species are very likely to be in one of the three threatened
categories. They are, as defined by the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature, ‘vulnerable’, ‘endangered’ or ‘critically endangered’.
“Now that is scary,” he said.
“But it’s also a wonderful opportunity to get our act together and focus on
ecology, to be able to address important questions useful for conservation.”
One way out is to make the list
itself more dynamic than it is. Instead of formally publishing a list once a
year, the ZSI could maintain a digital version that is constantly updated based
on new studies and nomenclature changes.
Abhijit Das, a scientist at the
Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, said he’d prefer this. “The numbers keep
changing and new species are often discovered, making such lists outdated very
soon.”
A more dynamic list would also
lend itself to more dynamic studies, with a small attendant risk of becoming
outdated themselves. This is all the more important because research in
amphibians hasn’t really taken off, according to Seshadri.
For one, frogs are harder to
study. For another, it’s hard to obtain research permits to study them because
of the dense green areas in which they live and breed.
But most of all, “people” – including
from the forest departments – “seem to love large fluffy animals,” he said.
They don’t care about frogs being killed in road accidents “but if it’s a tiger
or an elephant, they spring out of their cushy chairs. And the same applies to
most funding agencies.”
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