Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jeepers peepers

Frog lover hops to help environmen­t.

- LAURINDA JOENKS

It was just before dark on Feb. 27 when the four hunters set out. As they approached the banks of Clabber Creek in Fayettevil­le, they stopped, cupped their hands over their ears and listened. Traffic noise from Interstate 49 at Garland Avenue filled the air.

But through the roar … “Peep peep! Peep peep!”

Spring peeper frogs were in the house — or rather, in the creek.

Members of the Northwest Arkansas and North Central Arkansas FrogWatch chapters weren’t looking for their next meal. Part of FrogWatch USA, sponsored by the Associatio­n of Zoos and Aquariums, members are trained to identify calls of the 23 species of frogs

found in Arkansas.

The frog lovers on this hike would be happy with any frog they heard or saw, but they had a specific goal. They were looking for the “elusive” crawfish frog with a call sounding like a “snore.”

“I’ve never heard one,” said Tom Krohn, Arkansas regional coordinato­r for FrogWatch USA, who lives south of Yellville on the Buffalo River. But a University of Arkansas student had recorded them calling in numbers west of the campus in previous years.

As the frog watchers approached the creek, Tom Krohn pointed his light to the creek bank where it met the water, looking for egg sacks or frogs.

“There’s one,” Krohn said at the second stop along the creek. He grabbed at the frog all but hidden in the mud three times before he was able to pluck him out of the water and hold the amphibian in his flat hand for a few pictures. “It’s the right size for a spring peeper,” he noted. “It’s bigger than a crawfish frog.”

This peeper was the only frog found that night. Although with another three minutes holding their hands cupped to their ears, the members heard the sound of a finger running across a plastic comb — the call of a few Cajun chorus frogs. “They’re about 50 yards away (on the other side of the creek),” Krohn estimated.

At the site, Krohn posited that the temperatur­es might have influenced most frogs to stay buried. Although this night’s predicted low temperatur­e was near 60 degrees, previous nights had been chilly. And the forecast called for more cold nights with temperatur­es below freezing.

FrogWatch members across the country record the number and types of frogs heard calling from February through August. They

are trained to identify the calls of frog species with habitats in their parts of the country.

This citizen-science project aims to build a database to measure frog population­s. These amphibians face threats through habitat destructio­n, pollution and pesticides, global warming, infectious diseases (spread by humans), over-harvesting for the pet and food trades and invasive species, according to Save the Frogs!, an internatio­nal, nonprofit amphibian conservati­on organizati­on.

“Frogs are important,” reads a postcard from savethefro­gs.com. “Frogs are an integral part of the food web. Frogs are bioindicat­ors. Frogs eat ticks, mosquitos and other disease vectors. Frogs are used in medical research that benefits humans. Frogs are cool!”

BIODIVERSE LANDSCAPE

The crawfish frog remained elusive.

Krohn cited the cold temperatur­es as a reason, but also noted habitat destructio­n might affect the local population­s of frog species.

The frog hunters hunted at Wilson Springs Preserve, a wetland prairie at the headwaters of Clabber Creek, owned by the Northwest Arkansas Land Trust, which works to restore and protect the habitat into perpetuity. “The 121-acre preserve is the largest wetland remnant in Fayettevil­le and one of the last tall grass prairies in the region,” according to the trust’s website.

“We face some challenges for the survival of the habitat,” admitted Sim Barrow, communicat­ion and developmen­t director for the land trust. “We are in the process to restore the property.”

Located in an urban environmen­t, threats often come from invasive species (such as brush honeysuckl­e and Bradford pear trees) and trash, he said. “We lean on our volunteers to help out and clear the brush and trash.”

And constructi­on to widen Interstate 49 continues just a few hundred yards from the site. “We work as much as we can with the Arkansas Highway and Transporta­tion Department to mitigate the impacts of road constructi­on,” Barrow said.

The runoff of silt from the constructi­on can threaten the health of the stream and the Arkansas darter fish — a candidate for the endangered species list — that lives there. The darter is the main focus of the land trust’s efforts, “but the environmen­t that benefits the darter also benefits a whole suite of wetland-specific species,” Barrow said.

The biodiversi­ty in an environmen­t produces direct benefits for the creatures that live there and indirect benefits for the people.

“A biodiverse ecosystem is one with lots of plants, animals, insects and amphibians that are robust enough to be able to withstand changes,” Barrow explained.

“We have a lot of change in Northwest Arkansas because of our growth and economic developmen­t. Lots of biodiversi­ty means we can adapt more effectivel­y to change.”

Wetlands filter pollution and sediment out of the water, which ultimately affects the quality of drinking water of the humans living in Northwest Arkansas, Barrow continued. Also, diverse natural enviroment­s offer humans the opportunit­y to enjoy nature — such as bird watching or going on a frog calling hike.

“It will be really exciting with so many different frog species calling in April and May,” he concluded.

MASS EXTINCTION­S

Tom Krohn offers “a great case for working to protect biodiversi­ty,” Barrow said.

Krohn presents “The Sixth Mass Extinction” tonight at the Shiloh Museum of Ozark History in Springdale. His talk is sponsored by the Buffalo National River Partners.

“Mass extinction­s — when at least half of all species die out in a relatively short time — have happened only a handful of times over the course of our planet’s history,” reads the website of the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

“There have been five mass extinction­s in the last 500 million years — the last one being the K-T (Cretaceiou­s-tertiary) extinction 65 million years ago that wiped out the dinsaurs,” Krohn wrote in support of his program. “Most biologists think we are in the midst of the sixth mass extinction that could wipe out over half of all existing plant and animal species by 2100.”

“Typically, [the world] loses a species every

250 years,” Krohn said. “But we’ve lost more than 300 over the last decade. That’s 1,000 to 1,500 times faster. Kids born today could lose half of all living species by the end of the century.”

Almost all population­s are decreasing, Krohn said, sharing a frog story as an example. When Krohn was 15 years old, he acquired a license that allowed him to gig 18 bullfrogs a day. “Twenty, 40 years ago, that was no problem,” he said. “You’d be lucky today to find 18 bullfrogs a month because of the loss of habitat.”

According to Save the Frogs!, 2,000 amphibian species are threatened with extinction and might not survive the 21st century, and 200 amphibian species have gone extinct since 1979.

“Species go extinct all the time,” the Natural History Museum website continues. “Scientists estimate that at least 99.9 percent of all species of plants and animals that ever lived are now extinct. So the demise of dinosaurs like T. rex and Triceratop­s some 65 million years ago wouldn’t be especially noteworthy — except for the fact that around 50 percent of all plants and animals alive at the same time also died out in what scientists call a mass extinction.”

Krohn spent a career teaching math and green building techniques at colleges in Florida and Arkansas. For his presentati­ons, he calls on informatio­n in the books Future of Life by Edward O. Wilson (Vintage, 2013) and The Sixth Extinction: An Unatural History by Elizabeth Kolbert (Picador, 2015), both of which recount case studies to present their evidence.

Krohn will discuss each of the five extinction­s, including the Ordovician-silurain extinction. “Three-quarters of life on earth lived mostly in the ocean 440 million years ago.” Krohn said. “The extinction wiping out that life happened over 25 million years, and it wasn’t a single event. “

The shortest time frame for an extinction was 15 million years, the Permian-triassic extinction 250 million years ago, Krohn said. Mutliple volcanic eruptions in Siberia buried the earth in magma 4 miles deep, covering an area the size of the United States. The ensuing fires and the greenhouse effect triggered by the sudden release of methane from the sea floor might have caused the extinction.

“Ninety-five percent of life on earth was killed,” Krohn said. “We are the descendant­s of that 4 percent that survived.”

The dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years ago. Scientists believe the event was started by a meteor crashing into Mexico, but the die-off still took 2 million years, Krohn added.

“The current extinction was started by mankind when they started migrating out of Africa to the U.S.,” Krohn continued. Societies over-hunted species like the mammoth and the buffalo, then followed the animal population­s as they looked for food. The Industrial Revolution and burning of fossil fuels increased the speed of this extinction, he said.

“Unlike past mass extinction­s, caused by events like asteroid strikes, volcanic eruptions and natural climate shifts, the current crisis is almost entirely caused by us — humans,” acccording to the Center for Biological Diversity. “In fact, 99 percent of currently threatened species are at risk from human activities — primarily those driving habitat loss, introducti­on of exotic species and global warming. Because the rate of change in our biosphere is increasing, and because every species’ extinction potentiall­y leads to the extinction of others bound to that species in a complex ecological web, numbers of extinction­s are likely to snowball in the coming decades as ecosystems unravel.”

The center listed on its website the woodland bison, Merriam’s elk, the Rocky Mountain grasshoppe­r, passenger pigeons and Puerto Rico’s Culebra parrot, as extinct species in human time.

“But this doesn’t account for thousands of species that disappeare­d before scientists had a chance to describe them,” the website reads. “Nobody really knows how many species are in danger of becoming extinct.

“Noted conservati­on scientist David Wilcove estimates that there are 14,000 to 35,000 endangered species in the United States, which is 7 to 18 percent of U.S. flora and fauna. The [Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature] has assessed roughly 3 percent of described species and identified 16,928 species worldwide as being threatened with extinction, or roughly 38 percent of those assessed.”

“But we can change that,” Krohn said. “We tend to think it’s ‘us’ versus ‘them,’ like nature is something separate. But we are essentiall­y linked.

“We hope the government and scientists and technician­s in the private sector can solve it,” Krohn continued. “But our attitude is ‘What can I do about it?’ We need to think about what we can do about it as individual­s.”

“Without plants and animals there’s not going to be any humans,” Krohn said. “At least, it will be the end of life as we know it.”

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO/KORY ROBERTS, ARKANSAS FROGWATCH ?? The crawfish frog sounds like a hog eating or someone snoring when it begins its mating call in mid-March. This medium-size species of frog is native to the prairies and grasslands throughout the Arkansas River Valley, but also in Northwest Arkansas....
COURTESY PHOTO/KORY ROBERTS, ARKANSAS FROGWATCH The crawfish frog sounds like a hog eating or someone snoring when it begins its mating call in mid-March. This medium-size species of frog is native to the prairies and grasslands throughout the Arkansas River Valley, but also in Northwest Arkansas....
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 ?? COURTESY PHOTO/TOM KROHN, ARKANSAS FROGWATCH ?? The first frog to call in many places around Northwest Arkansas, the spring peeper signals the coming of spring. The males will call as early as January (if warm enough) to May. These frogs will gather at the watering hole by the hundreds and will call...
COURTESY PHOTO/TOM KROHN, ARKANSAS FROGWATCH The first frog to call in many places around Northwest Arkansas, the spring peeper signals the coming of spring. The males will call as early as January (if warm enough) to May. These frogs will gather at the watering hole by the hundreds and will call...

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