- Gemma Harding,
- Richard A. Griffiths and
- Lissette Pavajeau
Conservation Biology
Durrell
Institute of Conservation and Ecology, School of Anthropology and
Conservation, University of Kent, Marlowe Building, Canterbury, Kent, UK
Email: Richard A. Griffiths (r.a.griffiths@kent.ac.uk)
- This
article has been accepted for publication and undergone full peer
review but has not been through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination
and proofreading process, which may lead to differences between this
version and the Version of Record. Please cite this article as doi:
10.1111/cobi.12612
Abstract
Captive
breeding and reintroduction remain high-profile but controversial
conservation interventions. It is important to understand how such
programs develop and respond to strategic conservation initiatives. Here
we analyse the contribution to conservation made by amphibian captive
breeding and reintroduction since the launch of the IUCN Amphibian
Conservation Action Plan (ACAP) in 2007. Compared to earlier data
spanning four decades, the number of species involved in captive
breeding and reintroduction projects has increased by 57% in the seven
years since the ACAP. However, there have been relatively few new
reintroductions over this period with most programs focussing on
securing captive assurance populations and conservation-related
research. There has been a shift to a broader representation of frogs,
salamanders and caecilians within programs and an increasing emphasis on
threatened species. Equally, there has been a relative increase of
species in programs from Central and South America and the Caribbean,
where amphibian biodiversity is high. About half of the programs involve
zoos and aquaria with a similar proportion represented in specialist
facilities run by governmental or non-governmental agencies. Despite
successful reintroduction often being regarded as the ultimate milestone
for such programs, the irreversibility of many current threats to
amphibians may make this an impractical goal. Instead, research on
captive assurance populations may be needed to develop imaginative
solutions to enable amphibians to survive alongside current, emerging
and future threats.
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