April 2017, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute News
When
researchers discovered Craugastor evanesco in the rainforests of
Panama, they called it the vanishing robber frog to signify just how
quickly the deadly infectious amphibian disease chytridiomycosis had
devastated its population. By the time the researchers had published
about the new species in 2010, the vanishing robber frog had already
disappeared from the park where they had discovered it.
Now,
however, the vanishing robber frog may have a fighting chance at a
future thanks to the Panama Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project,
which in December became the first program to breed the species in human
care. After multiple attempts at breeding the species since 2015, a
single pair has now produced one offspring—a success that has encouraged
a cautious optimism that the rescue project can replicate the effort.
“A
single individual doesn’t make a successful captive breeding program,
but demonstrates that it can be done,” says Brian Gratwicke, an
amphibian conservation biologist for the Smithsonian Conservation
Biology Institute and rescue project international coordinator. “Every
journey begins with the first step, and this is a critical first step,
not just for this species, but potentially for other endangered
amphibians with similar reproductive needs.”
The
rescue project, a world-class amphibian center run by SCBI and the
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, currently has a founding
population of 20 males and 20 females of the vanishing robber frog.
Conservationists collected the frogs from a lowland site in central
Panama where the rescue project is working with the support of Minera
Panama S.A. to conserve amphibians in the area. But bringing a new and
critically endangered species into human care requires learning its own
unique husbandry and reproductive needs before it blinks out of
existence—sometimes resulting in insurmountable challenges.
“Piecing
together a species’ natural history with artificial systems, we can
recreate to the best of our abilities an environment where the animals
feel comfortable enough to breed,” said Heidi Ross, STRI’s director of
El Valle Amphibian Conservation Center, whose expertise and persistence
led to the successful first-time breeding of the species. “If we can get
them to this point, to become sexually active in our artificial
habitat, then we can simply tweak the system based on what worked, what
did not work, and what materials are at our disposal. What we arduously
do day in and day out is make sure we are providing the basic needs to
the animals so that they help us help them from going extinct in the
wild.”
The
Craugastor group of frogs has a unique reproductive system called
direct development—they bury eggs in wet sand and fully formed miniature
adults hatch from the eggs. Understanding the frogs’ reproductive cues,
special dietary needs and how to emulate the natural environment is
essential to successful breeding, Ross says.
“Given
the current difficult situation for amphibians in our region, this
project represents scientific and biological hope, not only for this
species of frog, but also for the recovery of Craugastor evanesco within
its distribution range,” said Blanca Araúz, biologist and biodiversity
superintendent of Minera Panamá. “As one of the species of interest for
our project Cobre Panamá, its reproduction in captivity is important.
Because the deadly infectious disease acts fast, experienced scientists
can control the infection in these frogs and breed them under better
conditions.”
Although
scientists are still occasionally finding individual vanishing robber
frogs in the field, they have not found a viable, self-sustaining
population. Chytridiomycosis has been linked to dramatic population
declines of amphibian species worldwide. This particular group of frogs
in the Craugastor rugulosus series are particularly susceptible to
chytridiomycosis with three closely related species in Panama having
disappeared, putting extra pressure on ensuring the survival of
Craugastor evanesco.
“It’s
all a learning curve,” Gratwicke says. “I’m hopeful that we’ll be able
to replicate this breeding event to develop a sustainable breeding
program. If we can do that, we’ll be able to get this species back out
in the wild as soon as we figure out how to safely do so. If we can do
that, it’ll be time to celebrate.”
The
Panama Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project is a partnership
between the Houston Zoo, Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, Zoo New England, SCBI
and STRI.
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