Please don’t croak: Biologists aim to save critically endangered Venezuelan frog
- Confined to a small area of the South American country, the Mucuchies frog has lost half its habitat due to deforestation
- One programme aims to encourage the amphibians to mate and has so far bred about 100 tiny jumpers
Enormous expectations rest on the tiny endangered amphibian perched on a rock in a plastic box: the Mucuchies frog needs to produce offspring if its species is to survive.
The dark, spotted creature is categorised as “critically endangered” on the Red List of threatened species of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) – the last step before an animal is declared “extinct in the wild.”
But there is cause for hope.
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Driven by a “passion” to save the unassuming two-centimetre critter, biologist Enrique La Marca and a team launched a breeding project at the REVA amphibian conservation centre in the city of Merida in Venezuela’s northwest.
To date, some two dozen captured adults have created about 100 tiny jumpers released into nature, said La Marca – more or less doubling the previously known number of Mucuchies frogs in the wild.
That should help the species, which according to the Red List, has seen 98 per cent of its habitat in the forests of the Venezuelan Andes lost to deforestation.
Today, its entire population is limited to an area smaller than 10 square kilometres.
“Most of the population disappeared between 15 and 25 years ago from areas around the region of Mucuchies where it was once abundant,” said La Marca.
The main reasons, according to the IUCN: crops and aquaculture encroaching on nature and polluting water sources, as well as the extraction of surface water for irrigation.
“There are streams that have dried up and springs that have decreased significantly. All this has a negative impact on organisms that are directly associated with water,” La Marca told AFP.
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The Mucuchies’ frog is a species that breeds during the wet season, laying eggs onto leaf litter.
The male protects the eggs until they hatch, then carries the tadpoles on his back and releases them into small pools where they complete their development.
But before the REVA project started in 2018, “we didn’t know what it (the frog) fed on, what reproduction was like, we were improvising and learning on the fly,” said La Marca.
They have since ascertained that to breed, the frog requires a sprinkling of plants such as bromelias, rocks and leaves for frolicking, the sounds of a stream, and a steady diet of insects and larvae.
The resulting offspring are raised in the lab for about a year after making the transition from tadpole to four-legged frog before they are released.
Then comes the “maximum challenge,” according to La Marca: “to survive in the new natural conditions they will face.”
On frequent field visits, the team searches for the slippery frogs between stones or on river banks, but it is hard to keep track of all of them.
“The greatest joy comes when … we notice that there are more songs in the place, an indication that they are procreating,” said La Marca.