by Tex Dworkin, 12/12/15 Care2.com
To
coincide with the final days of the climate negotiations in Paris, the
Vatican has permitted St. Peter’s Basilica to be turned into a huge
backdrop for a conservation-themed art installation, with huge images of various species being projected on to the building, including mammals, fish, insects and amphibians.
One
of the projected amphibians is believed to have dwindled down to a
population of one—and the sole survivor lives in Atlanta, Ga.
For Fiat Lux: Illuminating Our Common Home, National
Geographic photographers had their work projected onto the walls of St.
Peter’s Basilica, the Renaissance church located within Vatican City,
along with selections from Joel Sartore’s Photo Ark,
a project supported by the National Geographic Society that aims to
bring attention to the plight of animals at the hands of human beings.
An extension of the riveting film Racing Extinction, giant images of various creatures covered the walls of St. Peter’s Basilica
for three hours last Tuesday in an effort by humanitarian groups to
bring attention to the ongoing Paris Climate Talks, and to recognize
Pope Francis for his recent encyclical on environmental protection.
It’s not surprising that the Vatican has acted on behalf of nature’s voiceless creatures. Pope Francis chose his papal title in homage to St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals and the environment, and in his encyclical letter released in June 2015, Pope Francis wrote,
“Each year sees the disappearance of thousands of plant and animal
species which we will never know, which our children will never see,
because they have been lost for ever.”
The
Rabbs’ Fringe-limbed Tree Frog is one such disappearing species, and
his image was among those projected onto the Vatican church. To find out
more about this frog, I reached out to Mark Mandica, Amphibian Conservation Coordinator
of the Department of Research and Conservation at the Atlanta Botanical
Garden. He is the only person known to have recorded this frog’s call
(on Dec 15, 2014, to be exact), which you can hear here.
Mandica
says that the animal projections have had a large turnout. Sometimes
they are just images and sounds of endangered species from around the
world, and other times they include a ‘countdown’ which also displays
the estimated number left of each species on earth. That’s where the
Amphibian Conservation Program at the Atlanta Botanical Garden comes in.
These countdown events end by displaying the Rabbs’ Fringe-limbed Tree
Frog, which Mandica says “has been reduced to just one lone male on
earth.”
The
loner resides in a biosecure facility at the Atlanta Botanical Garden
called the frogPOD, along with some other frog species that were rescued
from Panama in 2005. When the frog’s image is projected onto the Vatican church,
Mandica describes, “Generally, the audience just gasps when they see
that there is (most likely) only one of these magnificent frogs left.”
Three
of the amphibian species from the Amphibian Conservation Program in
Atlanta have been featured in the projection events and in the recently
released documentary Racing Extinction;
the Eyelash Marsupial Frog, the Lemur Leaf Frog, and the lone Rabbs’
Fringe-limbed Tree Frog, which is a large gliding tree frog from Central
Panama about the size of an adult’s hand.
Mandica explains the plight of the Rabbs’ Fringe-limbed Tree Frog:
“The
species was only described in 2008 so we haven’t had much of an
opportunity to learn about them. A small number were collected as part
of a collaborative rescue mission to Central Panama in 2005. An emergent
infectious amphibian disease – chytridiomycosis – was wiping out 85% of
the amphibians in that region back then, and the Atlanta Botanical
Garden and Zoo went to Panama, ahead of the fungus, to try and save as
many frogs as possible.”
He
likens this mission to trying to grab your treasured belongings from a
burning house. After the disease hit central Panama several species
disappeared entirely from that region. The Rabbs’ Fringe-limbed Tree
Frog was previously only found from that area and is now believed to be
extinct in the wild.
Unfortunately
what few captive specimens did exist have all died out over the last 10
years except for this one lone male in Atlanta and no one has been able
to breed these frogs successfully in captivity. So presumably when this
last frog dies, so will its entire species. Mandica says they have no
way of telling exactly how old the last Fringe-limbed Tree Frog is or
how long its life expectancy is.
About
the frogs he studies, Mandica say, “They are disappearing, and their
declines are trying to tell us something is seriously out of balance
globally.” In fact, a number of years ago, he actually changed career
paths from amphibian biology to conservation biology when it became
harder and harder for him to simply find the frogs he was studying.
About
the Vatican illuminations, Mandica says, “I think they are a visually
magnificent, non-threatening way to get the message out about the global
extinction crisis. It is an important message and the public needs to
be more aware of what beauty is disappearing right before our eyes.”
Mandica
makes the point, “Generally speaking, amphibians are not highlighted as
endangered species, but there are more endangered amphibian species
than mammals and birds combined,” and that “40% of the world’s amphibian
species are documented as in decline or already extinct and that is
just a huge number.”
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