May 30,
2019,
ECO Rhode Island
Northern leopard frog about to
disappear from Rhode Island
By Todd McLeish, ecoRI News
contributor
When Scott Buchanan was hired as
a wildlife biologist at the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management
last year, he became the first full-time herpetologist on the state payroll.
It’s a sign, he said, that reptiles and amphibians are in need of management
and conservation in the state.
“To be in herpetology is to be on
the front lines of the global biodiversity crisis,” he said. “We’re at risk of
losing, globally, roughly half of the reptile and amphibian species on Earth in
the next 100 years. Turtles and frogs are in a neck-and-neck competition for
the unfortunate title of being the most endangered wildlife taxa.”
While Rhode Island’s reptiles and
amphibians haven’t experienced the level of habitat loss and disease that
occurs in Southeast Asia or the tropics, Buchanan said “the crisis is very real
in New England. The mission is very urgent, and we need to do everything we can
here in Rhode Island.”
About 40 species of turtles,
snakes, frogs, toads, and salamanders call the Ocean State home. All face
issues of habitat loss, road mortality, and disease, but turtles are also faced
with high demand from collectors for the pet trade.
While monitoring a rare
population of wood turtles this spring, herpetologist Lou Perrotti, director of
conservation at the Roger Williams Park Zoo, observed a small specimen he
estimated to be 5 or 6 years old.
“I love to see the little ones,”
he said, “but I worry that someone would put this one in their pocket and take
it home.”
It’s such a concern that Buchanan
is co-chair of a collaborative group of biologists, law enforcement officials,
and legal experts from up and down the East Coast working to combat the illegal
trade in native turtles. The objective, he said, is to raise the profile of the
issue and encourage the law-enforcement community to be aware that a black
market in native turtles exists in the region.
The illegal trade in wildlife is
valued at about $19 billion annually, according to the World Wildlife Fund’s TRAFFIC
program, a network of organization that monitors the trade.
“It’s something I worry a lot
about,” said Buchanan, who conducted research on spotted turtles for his
doctorate at the University of Rhode Island. “If you know where they are,
turtles are pretty easy to pick up, take home, keep alive, and get them into
the black market.
All of our native species are
vulnerable, though some are more prized than others.”
A Pennsylvania man was arrested
last year for smuggling 3,500 rare diamondback terrapins from marshes in New
Jersey and selling them online. Although no cases have been adjudicated in
Rhode Island, Buchanan said there is evidence of the illegal turtle trade in
the state.
Buchanan is also involved in
region-wide efforts to study spotted turtles and box turtles, two species that
are considered to be of significant conservation concern. He is conducting
surveys of both species in Rhode Island this spring to gather as much data as
possible about their distribution, abundance, demography, and population
genetics.
In collaboration with Roger
Williams Park Zoo and Brown University, he is also investigating the presence
of disease in local populations of reptiles and amphibians.
“We need to improve our
understanding of where the diseases are and what species are harboring them to
get a sense of their susceptibility,” Buchanan said. “There’s chytrid [a common
amphibian disease in the tropics] in our environment, though our frogs don’t
seem to be susceptible, but there hasn’t been a lot of testing. And there’s a
similar disease for salamanders that has had bad outbreaks in Europe, and we’re
worried about it coming overseas.”
Two species of amphibian — the eastern
spadefoot toad and northern
leopard frog — are on the verge of disappearing from Rhode
Island. Both have only one known population. The toad is only found at one site
in Richmond, though efforts are under way to create
habitat to establish additional populations.
The northern leopard frog is
found only on the border of Bristol and Warren, and Buchanan said there is
little that can be done to help it recover.
“The northern leopard frog might
be the best example of a species that’s about to disappear from the state,” he
said, noting that the species faces multiple threats from habitat loss,
pollution, and invasive species. “It could happen this year, next year, or in
five years, but all indications are it’s going to happen soon. And there’s not
a tool in my toolbox at the moment that I can use to confront the situation.”
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