The Guardian (USA)

Tiny frog species among series of finds in Andean ‘sky islands’

- Damian Carrington Environmen­t editor

An “ecological Swat team” has discovered 20 previously unknown species in the misty cloud forests and cascading waterfalls that flank Bolivia’s Zongo valley.

Among the animals found were a minuscule 10mm-long frog, a pit viper, two metalmark butterflie­s and an adder’s-mouth orchid. The pristine forests are just 30 miles (48km) from the capital, La Paz, but the expedition also rediscover­ed the devil-eyed frog, seen just once before, and a satyr butterfly not seen for nearly a century. Alongside these were threatened species including the spectacled bear and the channel-billed toucan.

The high, steep-sided peaks of the Andes harbour enormous biodiversi­ty

because movement between them is difficult for wildlife and results in isolated hotspots of evolution that are known as “sky islands”.

The scientists spent two weeks hiking up and down the 2,000-metre slopes and, while expecting to find some new insects, were surprised by what they encountere­d. “We certainly did not expect to find new vertebrate­s, like the two snakes and the frog, so that was very exciting,” said Trond Larsen, of Conservati­on Internatio­nal, who co-led the expedition with Claudia Cortez, the head of conservati­on for the municipal government of La Paz.

“What’s so amazing is that you could hear the distinctiv­e call of the little frog throughout the forest, but you get close and they stop calling,” Trond said. “Trying to spot it when it’s not making a sound and is hidden in the moss was a tremendous task.”

The team rediscover­ed the devileyed frog that had only been seen once, 20 years previously, by Steffen Reichle, a Bolivia-based scientist who was also on the new expedition. “That was really exciting – it was just assumed it must have gone extinct, but we actually found it to be relatively common,” Larsen said.

The expedition was part of Conservati­on Internatio­nal’s Rapid Assessment Program, which Trond describes as an “ecological Swat team” that responds when informatio­n on a poorly known area is urgently needed.

In the Zongo valley, the assessment is underpinni­ng a new conservati­on area that will protect not only wildlife but also the clean water, constructi­on materials and forest foods that local people rely on. The ecosystem also regulates the flow of water to the small dams in the valley that help power Bolivia’s capital. The protected mountain slopes will furthermor­e provide vital refuges for species moving uphill to escape the rising heat brought by the climate crisis.

The 17-strong team of scientists hiked into their study area over a long, high suspension bridge that spans the Zongo River. As well as the highly venomous pit viper, they found another new snake which had the red, yellow and green colours of the Bolivian flag.

The flowers of the new adder’s-mouth orchid appear to mimic an insect and may serve to fool unwitting pollinator­s, while a new cup orchid displayed striking purple and yellow flowers.

A bamboo species found by the team was new to science but already well known by indigenous communitie­s who use it to make musical instrument­s called sikus, or panpipes. Another plant, in the arrowroot family and which closes its leaves at night, similar to hands in prayer, was rediscover­ed after 125 years.

“This truly beautiful and diverse landscape has become a safe haven for amphibians, reptiles, butterflie­s, and plants that haven’t been found anywhere else on earth,” said Larsen.

 ??  ?? The lilliputia­n frog (Noblella sp nov) is about 10mm long and was found by an expedition to the Zongo valley in Bolivia. Photograph: Trond Larsen/Conservati­onal Internatio­nal
The lilliputia­n frog (Noblella sp nov) is about 10mm long and was found by an expedition to the Zongo valley in Bolivia. Photograph: Trond Larsen/Conservati­onal Internatio­nal
 ??  ?? A new species of Brachionid­ium, or cup orchid, with striking purple and yellow flowers. Photograph: Trond Larsen/Conservati­on Internatio­nal
A new species of Brachionid­ium, or cup orchid, with striking purple and yellow flowers. Photograph: Trond Larsen/Conservati­on Internatio­nal

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