Archive for June, 2009

POST-DOC POSITION IN AMPHIBIAN ECOTOXICOLOGY

Monday, June 29th, 2009

CNAH ANNOUNCEMENT
The Center for North American Herpetology
Lawrence, Kansas

http://www.cnah.org

29 June 2009

POST-DOC POSITION IN AMPHIBIAN ECOTOXICOLOGY

The Laboratory of Fish and Amphibian Ethology of the University of Liege (Belgium) is
accepting applications for a post-doctoral fellow for a 2-year project on evolutionary
ecology and ecotoxicology of frogs. This project will be based mainly on the egg and
tadpole stage, but will involve field sampling, young metamorphs, and breeding of adults.
This is a laboratory study mainly designed on behavioural patterns, using modern tools,
but also on morphology and life-history traits in the presence or absence of stressing
factors such as predators and pollutants. The post-doctoral fellow would be welcome to
adapt the design of the experiments in the framework of this topic. He/she will have two
controlled laboratory rooms available for his/her experiments and may supervise MSc
students.

The applications must contain a curriculum vitae with a complete list of publications, if
possible including the ISI impact factors (the list should include the references of
conference abstracts) and a letter of motivation. The deadline for the pre-selection is July
31, 2009. The selected candidate would be contacted in August to submit the final
proposal by early September. The post-doctorate, if accepted, would start on January 1,
2010. This post-doctoral position would be compensated by the FRS-FNRS (Belgian Funds
for Research) and be part of an on-going project with colleagues working on physiology
and chemistry.

The candidate needs to have completed a PhD thesis in a related topic, which he/she
would have presented less than 6 years ago. He/she must not have been a resident in
Belgium and he/she must speak English and/or French.

For further information, candidates should contact:

Mathieu Denoel, Ph. D.
Behavioural Biology Unit
University of Liege
22 Quai Van Beneden
B – 4020 Liege, Belgium
Mathieu.Denoel@ulg.ac.be

http://www.etho.ulg.ac.be/denoel/home.html

Cameron Diaz loves frogs? Maybe so, maybe not.

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Cameron Diaz - photo credits unknown

Cameron Diaz has been quoted as saying “I’d kiss a frog even if there was no promise of a Prince Charming popping out of it. I love frogs”. However, Cameron has yet to take any action to protect the frogs she claims to love. Furthermore, when we offered Cameron’s publicist Brad Cafarelli a list of five simple ways Cameron could help SAVE THE FROGS!, Brad told us that “unfortunately Cameron will be unable to participate in the campaign”.

So if you agree with us that Cameron Diaz would (1) look great in a 100% organic cotton SAVE THE FROGS! t-shirt that she can wear while recording a Public Service Announcement for SAVE THE FROGS!, and that (2) she should invite the media along with her to attend a lecture on the amphibian extinction crisis; and (3) she should be a guest of honor at a SAVE THE FROGS! fundraiser, please sign this petition asking Cameron Diaz to stand by her words and help SAVE THE FROGS!

SAVE THE FROGS! Memberships Now Available

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

We are pleased to announce that SAVE THE FROGS! is now a membership organization. Join SAVE THE FROGS! today and you’ll not only become part of a world-wide community of nature lovers and conservationists, you’ll be helping SAVE THE FROGS! protect amphibian populations today and for many years to come. Your support makes a significant difference! To celebrate our new status as a membership organization, we are offering you the opportunity to become a Charter Member of SAVE THE FROGS!.

Sign up to become a member of SAVE THE FROGS! by July 31st, 2009, and we’ll recognize your support by permanently listing your name on the SAVE THE FROGS! website’s soon to be unveiled Charter Members page. On top of your one-year membership, you’ll also receive some great gifts (like the SAVE THE FROGS! tote bag seen below), which you can read about on the Membership Page.

Thanks for your support!

Tote Bag

Witch Medicine in the Remote Himalayas

Monday, June 15th, 2009

By Rijan Tamrikar
5th June, 2009

We were in Mustang, in the north of Nepal, conducting a survey on Cheer Pheasants. After completing our call count in Kunjo, two of us moved to Ghumaune of Lete. There we stayed in the only lodge of the area, which was run by the local Thakali couple. Our host was the oldest herder of the Pipar region, a popular pheasant area. At the end of the day, while having dinner, my eye stuck on some fish-like dried animals hung above the traditional stove. I asked what they were. He simply replied “paha” (frogs). Then, I asked how many types of frogs are harvested for eating. He answered two, one is yellow in color and other is green.

“Is there any special reason for eating frogs” I asked. He plainly responded that it is good medicine for diarrhea. I inquired whether it was the common scenario in the village. He told me it was normal to have “paha”. This was not the first time I had heard about harvesting frogs in the mountainous region of Nepal. In April, 2008, we heard about people eating “paha”, the hunting of which tends to be a group recreation activity.

We are raising funds for an education program to teach the villagers about the importance of saving these fascinating frogs. Please donate today to save the “paha” and other frogs from extinction!

Shaman

Frog Art Contest Ending Soon – Cash Prizes!

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Frog Shirts

Frog populations worldwide are in the midst of a mass extinction crisis, yet most people are completely unaware! We need your help in getting the word out. This contest invites you to create cool artwork that features frogs and says SAVE THE FROGS! or savethefrogs.com (or both) somewhere on it. The contest will raise awareness of the amphibian extinction problem by getting people involved and interested, and the artwork will be used on t-shirts, stickers, posters, coffee mugs, hats, and in greeting cards and books, to both publicize our cause and raise money for SAVE THE FROGS! amphibian conservation efforts.

The 1st Annual Frog Art Contest comes to a close July 10th, so hurry and make your mark in history!

Oh, we forgot to mention there are CASH PRIZES!!!!

Frog Art

Want to help support amphibian conservation efforts, and keep frogs alive and healthy in the wild where they belong? Please order one of these fantastic Frog Art t-shirts, created by the First Lady of Frog Art, SAVE THE FROGS! Art Director Miss Leah Klehn.

Frog Shirt Gift

Frog Poetry Contest Ending Soon – Cash Prizes

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Amphibian populations worldwide are in the midst of a mass extinction crisis, yet most people are completely unaware! We need your help in getting the word out. This contest will raise awareness of the amphibian extinction problem by getting people involved and interested. The best frog poems will be used in a book of frog poetry that will be sold to raise money for amphibian conservation efforts. This book will feature artwork from our concurrent 1st Annual Frog Art Contest.

So hurry and submit your best frog poetry, because there are CASH PRIZES, and the deadline is July 10th!
Tell your friends and fellow frog poets too!

http://savethefrogs.com/poetry

    I Am

A Frog Poem by Heather Lonczak

I am stillness.
A trickling fountain.
A lullaby.

I am a whimsical collection.
A painting; a trinket.
A masterpiece!

I am a children’s game.
A princess and a dream.
A kiss.

I am a memory; a yearning.
Flirtation and fire flies.
A scream.

I am dazzling in green!
Graceful and aerodynamic.
Poisonous.

I am a moonlit serenade.
Tall grass and cat tails.
The earth.

I am change; adaptation.
A mystery and an answer.
A lesson.

I am a perfect specimen.
Unconsented, without a name.
Afraid.

I am an essential relation.
A dwindling breed.
Balance.

I am a microcosm
Of all that we have
And think that we need.

I am flamboyant obscurity.
I’ll slip through your fingers.
Catch me! I dare you.

I am a frog. Nothing more.
And far more than I seem.

Stand up for your rights as an American

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

visa card charity

One of the truly fantastic things about being American as is that we are the only group of people in the universe who are eligible for SAVE THE FROGS! Platinum Visa Cards. As the cards have NO ANNUAL FEE, and as SAVE THE FROGS! receives a $50 donation from the issuing bank after your first purchase (yes you only need to make ONE purchase), and as it only takes 5 minutes to apply for the card, we sincerely hope that you will immediately apply for one of these incredibly cool looking cards, which feature your choice of the Southern Orange-eyed Treefrog, the Lacelid frog, the Emerald-spotted Treefrog or the Blue Poison Dart Frog.
http://savethefrogs.com/visacard

If we all come together in patriotism and unity on this single occasion, and we all apply for and make a SINGLE PURCHASE with our ridiculously cool looking SAVE THE FROGS! Platinum Visa Card, for which SAVE THE FROGS! receives a percentage of every purchase you ever make with it, at NO EXPENSE to you, we will raise thousands of dollars with which to save the frogs from their imminent extinction!
THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS!

What can this money do?
(1) Fund grants and scholarships for scientists to conduct important research on amphibians.
(2) Help us purchase land to protect critically threatened amphibian populations.
(3) Pay for Public Service Announcements to go up in visible locations around the country and educate people so they reduce their impact on the environment.
(4) Help us in our fight to ban pesticides like atrazine, which cause limb deformities and hermaphroditism in frogs.
(5) Enable us to create and distribute FREE educational materials to schools, museums and zoos worldwide.

So please sign up for the SAVE THE FROGS! Platinum Visa Card today. It will take you 5 minutes, and is something you will feel good about!
http://savethefrogs.com/visacard

Thanks, Kerry

visa card reward

The Top Ten Ways To Stop Frogs From Going Extinct

Friday, June 12th, 2009

by SAVE THE FROGS! Founder & Executive Director Dr. Kerry Kriger

Poison Dart Frog

From the fossil record, we know that frogs naturally go extinct at a rate of about one species every 500 years. But in the last 30 years, up to 200 species have gone extinct, and a far greater number of species have dwindled significantly in population size. The current rate of frog extinctions is thus 3,000 times faster than than it should be, and we stand to lose at least one-third of the world’s 6,485 amphibian species in our lifetime if we don’t work swiftly to stop the extinctions.

In no particular order, here are the top ten steps that must be taken to prevent further frog extinctions.

(1) We need to minimize the damage being done by the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, which is being transported globally via the amphibian pet trade, food trade, lab trade, zoo trade and bait trade, and is responsible for up to 100 amphibian extinctions worldwide in the last three decades. We must also prevent future extinctions due to other diseases. To accomplish this we need to implement and enforce a virtually complete ban on all unnecessary long-distance trade and transport of amphibians (i.e. dismantle the food trade, bait trade and pet trade, though captive-bred, locally purchased species would be fine). Zoos and laboratories that require amphibians from afar would need to drastically reduce their number of shipments, and implement stringent quarantine/testing procedures. It should be clear that we currently lack the money, the equipment and the trained personnel to conduct disease testing on the millions of amphibians that are transported inter-continentally each year. Furthermore, no diagnostic tests are perfect, and it is impossible to test for diseases that have yet to be identified by science. Chytrid was causing extinctions for decades prior to its discovery by scientists. The continued intercontinental trade and transport of amphibians will inevitably result in future amphibian extinctions.

(2) We need a drastic reduction in the amount of pesticides and other pollutants, including coal combustion residues. The millions of tons of these chemicals that we put in the atmosphere each year cause gonadal deformities, limb deformities, mouthpart deformities, decreased immune response and other problems.

Save nature

(3) We need to ban the stocking of non-native fish as many amphibians have evolved in fishless areas and lack appropriate defenses. Many of these invasive fish species are voracious predators of amphibian eggs and tadpoles, and the fish and frogs cannot co-exist.

(4) We need laws protecting ephemeral wetlands (wetlands that hold water for only a portion of the year), which currently have few legal protections. Amphibians like these fishless habitats, but humans drain them in order to create land for house, parking lots and shopping malls.

(5) We need to ban the import of any wild-caught amphibian species, not solely because they spread disease, but because many of them are taken out of the wild from developing countries with few regulations, and the harvest is unsustainable.

(6) We need appropriate underpasses/overpasses or some means of dealing with amphibian road mortality in areas where this is a problem. I conservatively estimate that 60 million amphibians are killed by cars each year. (If each of the world’s 600 million vehicles hit only one amphibian per decade, this would be the case).

(7) We need funding and logistical support for the hundreds of critically endangered amphibian species that require and lack any captive breeding assistance.

(8) We need immediate action to combat global warming and climate change, which is drying waterbodies and cloud forests on which amphibians depend, and is causing the decline of mountaintop amphibian species that are unable to move further up the mountain to cool off (they are already at the top and have nowhere left to go). Global warming also weakens amphibian’s immune defenses and can alter host-parasite interactions.

(9) We need to halt the destruction of Earth’s remaining wilderness areas and restore habitats where possible. The rainforests of the world are being converted to agricultural areas or timber. Closer to home we have rampant urban expansion that destroys habitat and fragments remaining populations, leaving them more susceptible to inbreeding and related problems.

(10) We need to significantly increase the number of herpetologists, and conservationists in general. There are approximately 2,000 endangered amphibian species, but only about 2,000 full-time herpetologists. We simply do not have enough herpetologists to (a) determine the precise threats to individual species, and (b) implement the actions necessary to protect those species. This will only be possible with an increase in the number of scholarships and grants available, and through improved environmental education programs at the elementary, middle and high school level, which will produce undergraduates interested in pursuing careers in environmental conservation.

Donate Environment

Volunteer environment

SAVE THE FROGS! Wins The 2009 DEMOCRACY IN ACTION Green Grant Award

Friday, June 12th, 2009

We received some great news yesterday: based on our past successes and our potential to create significant environmental progress, Democracy In Action has awarded SAVE THE FROGS! a 2009 Green Grant. What’s that mean?

(1) We’ll be able to have online petitions, so you can easily write legislators or businesses THANK YOU notes and SPANK YOU notes. Nobody’s getting away with destroying frog habitat or passing bad environmental laws.

(2) No more PayPal! We’ll soon have an excellent online fundraising system, which includes recurring donations. You can’t wait to donate? Great, because we need your support today! Please donate here. Every dollar helps. Thanks!

(3) SAVE THE FROGS! will soon have a fantastic electronic newsletter, so make sure you’re signed up to receive it: http://savethefrogs.com/newsletters

Thank you to Democracy In Action!

Campaign Frogs

Making Save The Frogs Day 2010 a Massive Success

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Save The Frogs Day 2009

Few people are aware that frogs are disappearing worldwide at unprecedented rates. As most of the threats to frogs are caused by the actions of individuals, we need to educate our society with all due speed if we plan to stop an imminent mass extinction of amphibians that will result in irreversible consequences to ecosystems and to humans.

Can you imagine how much would be getting done to prevent global warming if, as is the case with frog extinctions, only 2% of the population had ever heard of global warming? Nothing would get done! Education is key, and that’s why Save The Frogs Day is so important.

We can make the amphibian common knowledge by the 2nd Annual Save The Frogs Day, April 30th, 2010, but ONLY WITH YOUR SUPPORT! Please chip in $10 right now so that we can make the 2nd Annual Save The Frogs Day a massive international event covered by every major news organization on the planet.

Donate Charity

We’re already planning the events…benefit concerts, activities at schools, zoos, museums, free public lectures, and we’re already writing politicians. Earlier this year Governor Kaine of Virginia became the highest ranking government official to officially acknowledge the amphibian extinction crisis when he signed Save The Frogs Day 2009 into law in Virginia. Mayor Robertson of Vancouver followed suit. Thousands of children in 15 different countries got educated about frogs through free public lectures. That was the first time the event was held, with virtually no funding and no full-time organizers for the event.

Imagine how big Save The Frogs 2010 can be — will be — with your support.

Please donate $10 right now and make Save The Frogs Day 2010 a massive success that eventually raises millions of dollars for amphibian conservation projects.

Thanks, Dr. Kerry Kriger
SAVE THE FROGS! Founder, Executive Director & Ecologist
kerry kriger


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