Archive for February, 2010

California Tiger Salamanders Need Your Urgent Assistance

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

The California Tiger Salamander (Ambystoma californiense) is threatened with extinction due to the widespread destruction of its habitat; high rates of road mortality; and hybridization with invasive species.

The California Fish and Game Commission will vote this Wednesday (March 3rd) on whether to list the California Tiger Salamander as threatened under the state Endangered Species Act. The Commission has failed to list the species as threatened on multiple occasions in the past.

Please send this letter to the California Fish & Game Commision urging them to list the California Tiger Salamander as Threatened under the state Endangered Species Act.

The call for comments period ends this Monday (March 1st), so please send your letter today!

Thanks!

January and February 2010 News Archive

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

From this point on, our Recent News & Website Updates section will no longer be on the homepage, it will be right here in the FrogBlog, so be sure to check back here regularly, and subscribe to our RSS feed!

SAVE THE FROGS Hardcopy Newsletter Archive
Did you know that SAVE THE FROGS has a hardcopy newsletter? Download PDF’s of a few previous editions here. Become a member of SAVE THE FROGS and have this hard-copy newsletter delivered direct to your door each month. The Save The Frogs Hardcopy Newsletter has all types of frog info not found online or in our electronic newsletter, so join SAVE THE FROGS today!

SAVE THE FROGS now has a Wish List on Amazon
Introducing a fantastic new way to help SAVE THE FROGS! We’ve created a Wish List on Amazon. Have a look at some of the items we need, pick one that you think would be a great gift, and let Amazon ship it directly to us! Thanks!

SAVE THE FROGS offers $500 Conference Travel Grant
SAVE THE FROGS is pleased to announce that applications are now open for a $500 SAVE THE FROGS! Conference Travel Grant. This grant will be awarded to a highly qualified student to present a lecture on their amphibian research at the Joint Meeting of Herpetologists and Ichthyologists in Providence, Rhode Island this July. Applicants will be judged on the quality and conservation value of their research. Learn more on the Awards page.

SAVE THE FROGS Toolbar for Internet Explorer or Firefox
Now you can add the brand new Save The Frogs toolbar to Internet Explorer or Firefox! Once you add the toolbar, each time you shop at one of the more than 1,300 participating stores, a percentage of what you spend will be donated to us at no extra cost to you! The toolbar also provides you with coupons and deals. The toolbar also has a search box and each time you search the Internet, about a penny is donated to SAVE THE FROGS!, and this adds up! It’s easy, so download the toolbar now!

Free Downloadable Frog Slideshows
As part of our ongoing effort to provide FREE educational resources to scientists, teachers and students, we are happy to announce that we now have three PowerPoint presentations that you can embed on your website or download. Now giving a presentation on Save The Frogs Day will be simple!

Frog Art Contest Winner Jonah Weissman on WVTF
Sandi Hausman of Charlottesville, VA Public Radio recently interviewed Jonah Weissman, winner of the Under 10 years old category of the 1st Annual Frog Art Contest. You can listen to the interview here, and order a print of Jonah’s artwork here.

1st Annual Frog Essay Contest Now Underway!
The SAVE THE FROGS! Essay Contest is designed to give teachers an easy way to get their students involved and interested in amphibian conservation…though you don’t have to be a student to enter! Each year we will give you an essay title. All you have to do is write the essay! This year’s essay title is: A World Without Frogs. We invite teachers, students and anyone else to submit 250-300 words of their finest frog literature. Good luck!

2010 Frog Art Contest Now Underway!
Calling all artists! The 2010 international Frog Art Contest has begun. The contest is a great way to get kids interested in amphibian conservation, so please inform your teachers of the contest. The artwork will be used to publicize our cause and raise funds for Save The Frogs amphibian conservation efforts. Have fun!

Cast Your Vote!
Save The Frogs is in the running for the Ideas for Change in America contest. Please go cast your vote for our idea to protect habitat for threatened amphibian species!

Students & Parents – Look Here
Want to get some Save The Frogs activities happening at your school? Please print this flyer and deliver it to your teacher (or ask your child to deliver it to their teacher). Or have a look at this list of ideas for university and high school students. Make something happen!

SAVE THE FROGS Now Based in California!

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

We are happy to announce that SAVE THE FROGS has completed its relocation from Virginia to beautiful Santa Cruz, California, at the northern end of the Monterey Bay, about 110km south of San Francisco. Santa Cruz and the Bay Area have strong environmental movements and some of the world’s most imaginative thinkers. We plan to use this to our advantage to make Santa Cruz the most frog-friendly city on the planet, and California the epicentre of the world’s amphibian conservation efforts.

We’ll be announcing the first of our California initiatives soon, so keep checking the FrogBlog (subscribe to our RSS feed!), and make sure you’re signed up for the SAVE THE FROGS! Newsletter.

Here are some photos of SAVE THE FROGS Headquarters

51 Ways to Save The Frogs, this is the front entrance of STFHQ:
Save The Frogs Headquarters

This is how much furniture we started with!
Save The Frogs Headquarters

We still need to purchase chairs, desks, filing cabinets, a printer, modem, router, and a few computers so we can get volunteers in here. Lots of volunteers! Please donate $20 today! and help us get this show on the road! Thanks!

Save The Frogs Headquarters

Save The Frogs Headquarters

Lots of windows, so no electric lighting necessary during the day:
Save The Frogs Headquarters

Save The Frogs Headquarters

Save The Frogs Headquarters

The view out the back window:
Save The Frogs Headquarters

The Fight To Save Glenmere Lake’s Endangered Cricket Frogs

Friday, February 12th, 2010

The Great Stakes at Glenmere Lake
By Dr. Jonathan Micancin, a Visiting Assistant Professor of Biology at The College of William and Mary.

Acris crepitans - Northern Cricket Frogs

What to do about the Northern Cricket Frog and Glenmere Lake? An endangered frog has jumped in the way of real estate projects and manipulation of a public water supply in Orange County. To eliminate this obstacle, a bill has recently been drafted to remove the Northern Cricket Frog from New York State’s list of endangered species, despite the fact that cricket frogs, like many other amphibians around the world, are in decline.

We should consider what is at stake for every person that is affected by this issue. A vocal few have money, pride, reputation, ethical convictions, and/or preferred lifestyle on the line. Many more drink the water from Glenmere Lake and will be affected by any economic development that occurs nearby. A far greater number of people have a stake in what happens to cricket frogs and Glenmere Lake in the next few years: every person on earth. This is no exaggeration, but it requires an explanation.

It was only about 25 years ago that scientists began to recognize a pattern of amphibian decline in supposedly pristine areas like cloud forests in Central America and mountain lakes in California. It is only recently that we have realized that amphibians are dying out everywhere, whether they live in national parks or in backyards. Of the more than 6000 known amphibian species, at least 42% are in decline and at least 32% are threatened with extinction or are already gone forever. Amphibians are especially sensitive to human disturbance and most receive a double-dose of it by living in water and on land. These factors make it difficult to point to a single cause for the decline or extinction of even one species. Habitat loss and a fungal disease called chytridiomycosis (“kit-trid” for short) are major killers. Climate change is also implicated in amphibian declines, as is a long list of other manmade problems.

A major concern for people that study amphibians is that some probable causes of amphibian declines can also affect humans. Perhaps the most insidious among these is pollution. Banned chemicals like DDT and PCBs and wildly popular herbicides like Roundup and atrazine can be toxic, but even if they do not kill, they persist in the environment and their effects may be terrible. One reason is that, like the substance BPA that was recently removed from plastic bottles, they are endocrine disruptors. Endocrine disruptors emulate hormones found in frogs and people and they have been linked to such human health problems as cancer, brain disorders, miscarriages, and other reproductive maladies. Children appear to be particularly vulnerable to endocrine disruption.

The precautionary principle holds that in the absence of information showing that some action will not harm the environment or human health, it is better to act with caution than to assume that no ill effects will occur. With connections between amphibian and human well-being becoming clear, opportunities to study amphibian declines in areas where many people live are increasingly important. Because cricket frogs have declined over large and diverse areas (the upper Midwest, the Southeast, and New York), multiple causes are probably responsible. By comparing Glenmere Lake and the area around it with places in New York where the Northern Cricket Frog no longer occurs, we could begin to determine the causes of the decline of the species, which in turn could indicate potential threats to human health. Such work would inform amphibian biology and public health far beyond Orange County. Because the Northern Cricket Frog is already endangered in New York, it is safe to expect that any substantial changes to the habitat of cricket frogs around Glenmere Lake will reduce their numbers and diminish the opportunity to learn from them. This is why every person on earth has a stake in Glenmere Lake.

I was born in the Hudson Valley and as a boy I explored its rivers, lakes, and ponds. Catching amphibians became one of my favorite pastimes, but I never saw or heard a cricket frog. I have since earned a Ph.D in Biology by studying two species of cricket frogs in North Carolina. Safely removed from the controversy that surrounds them back home in New York, I see that it is good news for the people that depend on Glenmere Lake for water that cricket frogs can thrive there. The presence of the Northern Cricket Frog suggests that Glenmere Lake is relatively clean and protected. To our peril, few things in nature stay that way for long.

Job Opening: Disease Ecology and Amphibian Conservation

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Job Opening: Postdoctoral Scientist at UC Boulder

Creative and motivated candidates are invited to apply for a Postdoctoral
Scientist position working at the intersection of disease ecology and
amphibian conservation at the University of Colorado, Boulder. The
position will focus on exploring questions in one of two focal areas:

(1) Applying metacommunity theory to host-parasite interactions at
multiple spatial scales, and/or

(2) Understanding the immunological mechanisms that mediate patterns of
parasite coinfection and amphibian disease.

A wide range of parasites will be included in the study, but particular
emphasis will be placed on the trematode Ribeiroia ondatrae and its
effects on amphibian malformations. Previous field and/or experimental
experience with host-parasite systems is essential, and a background in
community ecology, landscape ecology and/or immunology is strongly
encouraged. Experience with GIS and analysis of spatial data is
preferred. Because funding for positions is derived from several sources,
the selected candidate will have some flexibility in developing specific
projects. Focal project areas include: using ecological ‘rules’ to
understand patterns of parasite interaction within and among hosts,
identifying the effects of host and parasite diversity on disease, and
evaluating the importance of dispersal and species interactions in
structuring host and parasite communities. Target start date is spring or
summer of 2010. Interested applicants should send (as a single pdf) the
following: a complete CV, contact information for references, and a brief
statement of research interests related to this position (<2 pages) to Dr.
Pieter Johnson (pieter.johnson@colorado.edu), Ecology and Evolutionary
Biology Department, University of Colorado (see
www.colorado.edu/eeb/facultysites/pieter).
DEADLINE EXTENDED: APPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED UNTIL MARCH 15, 2010.
--
Pieter Johnson, PhD/Ecology and Evolutionary Biology/Ramaley N122, CB334
University of Colorado/Boulder, CO 80309/303.492.5623
www.colorado.edu/eeb/facultysites/pieter

Ideas For Change In America

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Save The Frogs is in the running for the Ideas for Change in America contest. Please go cast your vote for our idea to protect habitat for threatened amphibian species!

Habitat destruction is the primary cause of amphibian extinctions in America and worldwide. The simple act of protecting amphibian habitat for threatened frog species is critical to environmental conservation efforts. The creation of such amphibian reserves would also raise awareness of the worldwide decline in amphibian populations, and the multitude of threats they face (pollution, pesticides, climate change, over-harvesting for the pet and food trades, infectious diseases, and invasive non-native species).

Thanks for voting for SAVE THE FROGS!

Habitat Destruction clearcut


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