Vancouver Sun

Evening songs dying out

Habitat loss, climate change, pollution and fungus behind amphibians’ dramatic decline

- BEN FOX AND EZEQUIEL ABIU LOPEZ

Scientists report that many types of amphibians, especially frogs, are in a steep global decline likely caused by a mix of habitat loss and climate change.

PATILLAS, Puerto Rico — A curtain of sound envelops the two researcher­s as they make their way along the side of a mountain in darkness, occasional­ly hacking their way with a machete to reach the mouth of a small cave.

Peeps, tweets and staccato whistles fill the air, a pulsing undercurre­nt in the tropical night. To the untrained ear, it’s just a mishmash of noise. To experts tracking a decline in amphibians with growing alarm, it’s like a symphony in which some of the players haven’t been showing up.

In parts of Puerto Rico, for example, there are places where researcher­s used to hear four species at once and they are now hearing one or two, a subtle but important change.

“You are not hearing what you were before,” said Alberto Lopez, part of a husband- andwife team of biologists trying to gauge the health of frogs on the island.

Scientists report that many types of amphibians, especially frogs, are in a steep global decline likely caused by a mix of habitat loss, climate change, pollution and a virulent fungus. The downward spiral is striking particular­ly hard in the Caribbean, where a majority of species are now losing a fragile hold in the ecosystem.

Without new conservati­on measures, there could be a massive die- off of Caribbean frogs within 15 years, warned Adrell Nunez, an amphibian expert with the Santo Domingo Zoo in the Dominican Republic. “There are species that we literally know nothing about” that could be lost, he said.

We are just starting to understand the ripple down effects and the repercussi­ons of losing amphibians.

JAMIE VOYLES BIOLOGIST

Researcher­s such as Lopez and his wife, Ana Longo Berrios, have been fanning out across the Caribbean and returning with new and troubling evidence of the decline. In some places, especially in Haiti, where severe deforestat­ion is added to the mix of problems, extinction­s are possible.

It is part of a grim picture overall. The Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature has found that 32 per cent of the world’s amphibian species are threatened or extinct, including more than 200 alone in both Mexico and Colombia.

“Everywhere we are seeing declines and it’s severe,” said Jan Zegarra, a biologist based in Puerto Rico for the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Frogs may be less charismati­c than some other troubled species, but their role in the environmen­t is important. They are consumed by birds and snakes and they in turn are major predators of mosquitoes. Their absence could lead to a rise in malaria and dengue, not to mention discomfort.

There are also less tangible reasons for protection. The coqui, the common name for a genus that includes 17 species in Puerto Rico, including three believed to be already extinct, is important to the cultural heritage of the island; it’s considered a symbol of the island, seen in everything from indigenous petroglyph­s to coffee mugs sold to tourists at the airport. Frogs, which breathe and process toxins through their skin, are considered a promising area for pharmaceut­ical research and a bio- indicator that can tell scientists about what’s going on in the environmen­t.

“We are just starting to understand the ripple down effects and the repercussi­ons of losing amphibians,” said Jamie Voyles, a biologist at New Mexico Tech in Albuquerqu­e and one of the principal investigat­ors of Project Atelopus, an effort to study and protect frogs of an endangered genus in Panama.

Frogs have been under siege around the world from a fungus called Batrachoch­ytrium dendrobati­dis, known for short as “Bd,” which has been known to be weakening and killing amphibians since the late 1990s though much about it remains under scientific study, Voyles said.

Rafael Joglar, a biologist at the University of Puerto Rico, has noted the diminishin­g nighttime calls in decades of research on the island and not just from the three species believe to have gone extinct. “Many of the other species that were common when I was a younger student ... are now disappeari­ng and are actually very rare.”

In percentage terms, the worst situation for frogs is the Caribbean, where more than 80 per cent of species are threatened or extinct in the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Jamaica and more than 90 per cent in Haiti, according to the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature. In Puerto Rico, it’s around 70 per cent.

One major reason the Caribbean is so vulnerable is that many species are found only within a small habitat on just one island. Take, for example, the coqui guajon, or rock frog, which was the focus of attention by Lopez and Longo on a recent night. About the size of a golf ball, it is what’s known as a habitat specialist, found only in caves of a certain kind of volcanic rock along streams in southeaste­rn Puerto Rico.

“That’s why it’s such a vulnerable species,” Lopez said. “If something happens to the habitat, people can’t just grab them and put them in another place on the island because this habitat is only found on the southeast of the island.”

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 ?? RICARDO ARDUENGO/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The common coqui is one of 17 species of the genus coqui native to Puerto Rico, three of which are believed to be extinct.
RICARDO ARDUENGO/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The common coqui is one of 17 species of the genus coqui native to Puerto Rico, three of which are believed to be extinct.

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