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June 2005
Extinction
of Frogs is Catastrophic, Scientists Say
By Carlos
Andrade
QUITO, Ecuador (Reuters) - Before the arrival of Spanish colonizers some 500
years ago, Indians in what is now Ecuador dipped their arrowheads in venom extracted
from the phantasmal poison frog to doom their victims to convulsive death, scientists
believe.
More recently, epibatidine -- the chemical which paralyzed and killed the Indians'
enemies -- has been isolated to produce a pain killer 200 times more powerful
than morphine, but without that drug's addictive and toxic side effects.
Pharmaceutical companies have not yet brought epibatidine to market but hope
to discover other chemicals with powerful properties in frogs, which are a traditional
source of medicine and food for many of Ecuador's Indians. They may want to
hurry because the treasure trove of the world's frogs and toads is disappearing
at a catastrophic rate. And it's not just potential medicines which could be
vanishing but creatures of beauty.
"Frogs and toads are becoming extinct all over the world. It's the same
magnitude event as the extinction of the dinosaurs," said Luis Coloma,
a herpetologist, or scientist dedicated to studying reptiles and amphibians,
in Ecuador -- the country with the third-greatest diversity of amphibians. The
thumb-sized jungle-dwelling phantasmal poison frog is an example of amphibian
good looks, despite its macabre associations. It is bright red with fluorescent
green stripes.
At least two out of five of the 3,046 amphibian types in the Americas -- home
to 53 percent of known species -- are threatened with extinction, according
to a recent report titled "Disappearing Jewels" by lobby group NatureServe.
Nine amphibians, including eight frogs and a salamander, have become extinct
in the Americas in the last 100 years, including five since 1980, according
to the report. Scientists have also been unable to find representatives of another
117 species, which are also possibly extinct.
VARIOUS CAUSES
Toads and frogs are dying out under pressure from the expansion of agriculture,
forestry, pollution, disease and climate change, NatureServe said.
"Amphibians are disappearing before our eyes," the report said. Scientists
fear they could be indicator species -- a sign of possible future damage to
other parts of the ecosystem because frogs and toads are especially vulnerable
and thus are the first to disappear.
"Disappearing amphibians break links in the food chain, with often unpredictable
effects on other organisms," the report said.
Governments should strengthen controls at existing nature reserves and encourage
the breeding of endangered species in captivity if they are to save frogs, NatureServe
says.
They should also foster research on the recently discovered chytrid fungal disease,
which is killing frogs, and educate the public about the plight of amphibians,
it said.
"We have to change the idea that they are ugly and slimy. They are beautiful,
diverse species, just like hummingbirds or butterflies," said Martin Bustamante,
herpetologist at Ecuador's Catholic University. The Catholic University possesses
one of the largest collections of captive live frogs in the Americas, and, to
boost public awareness of frogs and toads and their tribulations, it recently
staged an exhibition of some of its charges in the capital Quito.
The jungles and mountains of Ecuador are home to 417 species of frogs and toads,
of which more than a third are classed as vulnerable or in critical danger of
extinction. In the Americas, only Colombia and Mexico are home to more endangered
amphibians, according to NatureServe.
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