First Release Trial To Help Pave
the Way for Reintroduction Programs for Critically Endangered Frogs
Press Release, Smithsonian's
National Zoo & Conservation Biology Institute, 6/1/17
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Ninety Limosa harlequin frogs
(Atelopus limosus) bred in human care are braving the elements of the wild
after Smithsonian scientists sent them out into the Panamanian rainforest as
part of their first-ever release trial in May. The study, led by the Panama
Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project, aims to determine the factors that
influence not only whether frogs survive the transition from human care to the
wild, but whether they persist and go on to breed.
“Only by understanding the trials
and tribulations of a frog’s transition from human care to the wild will we
have the information we need to someday develop and implement successful
reintroduction programs,” said Brian Gratwicke, international program
coordinator for the rescue project and Smithsonian Conservation Biology
Institute (SCBI) amphibian conservation biologist. “Although we are not sure
whether any of these individual frogs will make it out there, this release
trial will give us the knowledge we need to tip the balance in favor of the
frogs.”
The Limosa harlequin frogs, which
were released at the Mamoní Valley Preserve, have small numbered tags inserted
under their skin so researchers can tell individuals apart. The scientific team
also gave each frog an elastomer toe marking that glows under UV light to
easily tell this cohort of frogs apart from any future releases.
Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation doctoral student Blake Klocke is
currently monitoring the frogs daily at the site, collecting information about
survivorship, dispersal, behavior and whether the warm micro-climate in the
area provides any protection against disease.
The study is also looking at
whether a “soft release” boosts the frogs’ ability to survive. Thirty of the
newly released frogs spent a month at the site in cages, acclimating to their
surroundings and foraging on leaf-litter invertebrates. Eight of these frogs,
and eight that were released without the trial period, are wearing miniature
radio transmitters that will give Klocke and the team a chance to look at
differences in survival and persistence between the two groups. The researchers
also collected skin-bacteria samples from the soft-release frogs to measure
changes during their transition from captivity to the wild.
“The soft release study allowed
us to safely expose captive-bred frogs to a more balanced and varied diet,
changing environmental conditions and diverse skin bacteria that can
potentially increase their survival in nature,” said Angie Estrada, Ph.D.
student at Virginia Tech and a member of the team leading the soft release,
which was funded through a Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI)
grant. “It allowed us to monitor health and overall body condition of the
animals without the risk of losing the frogs right away to a hungry snake.”
Limosa harlequin frogs are
especially sensitive to the amphibian chytrid fungus, which has pushed frog
species to the brink of extinction primarily in Central America, Australia and
the western United States. The Panama Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project
brought a number of individuals into the breeding center between 2008 and 2010
as chytrid swept through their habitat. The Limosa harlequin frogs in this
release trial are the first captive-bred generation of the species and only part
of the rescue project’s total insurance population for the species.
“After all the work involved in
collecting founder individuals, learning to breed them, raising their tadpoles,
producing all their food and keeping these frogs healthy, the release trial
marks a new exciting stage in this project,” said Roberto Ibáñez, in-country
director of the rescue project and STRI scientist. “These captive-bred frogs
will now be exposed to their world, where predators and pathogens are
ever-present in their environment. Their journey will help provide the key to
saving not only their own species, but Panama’s other critically endangered
amphibian species.”
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