Meet three new toads that make a
home in parts of the West’s harshest desert.
Maya L. Kapoor, 7/26/2017, 2017,
Highland Country News
Update of article in Vol. # 19
Issue # 43 7/7/17,article # 1 which only mentioned the Dixie Valley Toad.
Researchers at the University of
Nevada, Reno, have named three new toad species: the Dixie Valley toad, the
Railroad Valley toad and the Hot Creek toad. This is an especially exciting
feat because it’s rare to find new species of any amphibians, the class of
animals that includes toads, frogs, newts, salamanders and caecilians. The most
recent toad discovery north of Mexico, the Wyoming toad, was found almost half
a century ago in 1968, and it has since gone extinct in the wild.
And while it’s rare to find new
amphibians anywhere, these toads are particularly intriguing because they live
in the Great Basin region of northern Nevada, which is one of the driest parts
of the country, averaging slightly more than 13 inches of rain per year. The
toads thrive in tiny, naturally occurring oases such as small springs, wetlands
or seeps, where thick vegetation makes them hard to spot during the day, according
to a statement by researchers. In fact, researchers estimate
that these cryptic species, which are relatively new to science, have actually
existed in small habitats in isolation from other amphibian populations for
some 650,000 years.
Dixie Valley toads inhabit just
four square miles in Nevada’s Great Basin, an area where geothermal development
threatens the species’ survival.
Patrick Donnelly / Center for
Biological Diversity
Already, though, the smallest of
the new species — the Dixie Valley toad — faces extinction due to proposed
alternative energy projects in its habitat. Growing to just two and half inches
long, the toad is olive with golden flecks. Although researchers don’t yet know
how many Dixie Valley toads exist, they do know that their range is quite
small: the entire species inhabits a spring-fed marsh of less than four square
miles, approximately 100 miles east of Reno. This suggests that there aren’t
many Dixie Valley toads.
It’s not easy being green — or
olive — in the Dixie Valley. It’s the hottest and most geothermally active
system in the Basin and Range Province and already is home to the largest
geothermal energy plant in Nevada, which has been in operation for more than 20
years. The energy company Ormat has proposed
developing new geothermal projects in the valley, which
researchers predict would have “devastating” consequences on the toad’s
breeding habitat.
A view of Dixie Valley, where marshland
hides the entire existing population of Dixie Valley toads.
Patrick Donnelly / Center for
Biological Diversity
Because of its small population
size, the Dixie Valley toad is especially vulnerable to a suite of risks beyond
ongoing and proposed energy development. It faces the threat of deadly chytrid
fungus infections, which have been found in nearby bullfrogs, habitat loss, and
other localized threats — many of the same causes that led to the total
disappearance in the wild of the Wyoming toad.
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