Date: April 11, 2019
Source: University of Kent
Research scientists led by the University of
Kent have uncovered hidden diversity within a type of frog found only in the
Seychelles, showing that those on each island have their own distinct lineage.
The family tree of sooglossid frogs dates
back at least 63 million years. They are living ancestors of those frogs that
survived the meteor strike on earth approximately 66 million years ago, and
their most recent common ancestor dates back some 63 million years, making them
a highly evolutionarily distinct group.
However, recent work on their genetics led by
Dr Jim Labisko from Kent's School of Anthropology and Conversation revealed
that until they can complete further investigations into their evolutionary
relationships and verify the degree of differentiation between each island
population, each island lineage needs to be considered as a potential new
species, known as an Evolutionarily Significant Unit (ESU). As a result, Dr
Labisko advises conservation managers they should do likewise and consider each
as an ESU.
There are just four species of sooglossid
frog; the Seychelles frog (Sooglossus sechellensis), Thomasset's rock frog (So.
thomasseti), Gardiner's Seychelles frog (Sechellophryne gardineri) and the
Seychelles palm frog (Se. pipilodryas).
Of the currently recognised sooglossid
species, two (So. thomasseti and Se. pipilodryas) have been assessed as
Critically Endangered, and two (So. sechellensis and Se. gardineri) as
Endangered for the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN Red
List. All four species are in the top 50 of ZSL's (Zoological Society of
London) Evolutionarily Distinct Globally Endangered (EDGE) amphibians.
Given the Red List and EDGE status of these
unique frogs Dr Labisko and his colleagues are carrying out intensive
monitoring to assess the level of risk from both climate change and disease to
the endemic amphibians of the Seychelles.
Dr Labisko, who completed his PhD on
sooglossid frogs at Kent's Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology in
2016 said many of these frogs are so small and good at hiding the only way to
observe them is by listening for their calls. Although tiny, the sound they
emit can be around 100 decibels, equivalent to the sound volume of a power
lawnmower’.
Dr Labisko's team are using sound monitors to
record the vocal activity of sooglossid frogs for five minutes every hour,
every day of the year, in combination with dataloggers that are sampling
temperature and moisture conditions on an hourly basis
Dr Labisko said: 'Amphibians play a vital
role in the ecosystem as predators, munching on invertebrates like mites and
mosquitos, so they contribute to keeping diseases like malaria and dengue in
check. Losing them will have serious implications for human health.’
As a result of this study into the frogs, the
research team will also contribute to regional investigations into climate
change, making a local impact in the Seychelles.
Amphibians around the world are threatened by
a lethal fungus known as chytrid. The monitoring of these sooglossid frogs will
provide crucial data on amphibian behaviour in relation to climate and disease.
If frogs are suddenly not heard in an area where they were previously, this
could indicate a range-shift in response to warming temperatures, or the
arrival of disease such as chytrid -- the Seychelles is one of only two global
regions of amphibian diversity where the disease is yet to be detected.
It may also impact on a variety of other
endemic Seychelles flora and fauna, including the caecilians, a legless
burrowing amphibian that is even more difficult to study than the elusive
sooglossids.
Researchers know that caecilians can be found
in similar habitats to the frogs, so they can use the frog activity and
environmental data they are collecting to infer caecilian presence or absence
and generate appropriate conservation strategies as a result.
Endemic, endangered and evolutionarily
significant: cryptic lineages in Seychelles' frogs (Anura: Sooglossidae) by Jim
Labisko Richard A Griffiths Lindsay Chong-Seng Nancy Bunbury Simon T Maddock
Kay S Bradfield Michelle L Taylor Jim J Groombridge is published in the
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.
Story Source:
Materials provided by University of Kent. Note: Content may be
edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
Jim Labisko, Richard A Griffiths, Lindsay
Chong-Seng, Nancy Bunbury, Simon T Maddock, Kay S Bradfield, Michelle L Taylor,
Jim J Groombridge. Endemic, endangered and evolutionarily significant: cryptic
lineages in Seychelles’ frogs (Anura: Sooglossidae). Biological Journal of the
Linnean Society, 2019; 126 (3): 417 DOI: 10.1093/biolinnean/bly183
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