New ‘dancing frog’ species found — but it may already be too late
The tiny amphibians, which earned their name with the kicks they use to attract mates, declined dramatically in number during the past 12 years.
Satyabhama Das Biju
/ AP
One of the 14 new species of so-called dancing frogs discovered by a
team headed by University of Delhi professor Sathyabhama Das Biju in
the jungle mountains of southern India.
NEW DELHI—Scientists
have discovered 14 new species of so-called dancing frogs in the jungle
mountains of southern India — just in time, they fear, to watch them
fade away.
Indian biologists say
they found the tiny acrobatic amphibians, which earned their name with
the unusual kicks they use to attract mates, declining dramatically in
number during the 12 years in which they chronicled the species through
morphological descriptions and molecular DNA markers. They breed after
the yearly monsoon in fast-rushing streams, but their habitat appears to
be becoming increasingly dry.
“It’s like a Hollywood
movie, both joyful and sad. On the one hand, we have brought these
beautiful frogs into public knowledge. But about 80 per cent are outside
protected areas, and in some places, it was as if nature itself was
crying,” said the project’s lead scientist, University of Delhi
professor Sathyabhama Das Biju.
Biju said that, as
researchers tracked frog populations, forest soils lost moisture and
perennial streams ran inexplicably dry. He acknowledged his team’s
observations about forest conditions were only anecdotal; the scientists
did not have time or resources to collect data demonstrating the
declining habitat trends they believed they were witnessing.
The study listing the
new species — published Thursday in the Ceylon Journal of Science —
brings the number of known Indian dancing frog species to 24.
They’re found
exclusively in the Western Ghats, a lush mountain range that stretches
1,600 kilometres from the western state of Maharashtra down to the
country’s southern tip.
Only the males dance —
it’s actually a unique breeding behaviour called foot-flagging. They
stretch, extend and whip their legs out to the side to draw the
attention of females who might have trouble hearing mating croaks over
the sound of water flowing through perennial hill streams.
The bigger the frog,
the more they dance. They also use those leg extensions to smack away
other males — an important feature considering the sex ratio for the
amphibians is usually around 100 males to one female.
“They need to perform
and prove, ‘Hey, I’m the best man for you,’” said Biju, a
botanist-turned-herpetologist now celebrated as India’s “Frogman” for
discovering dozens of new species in his four-decade career.
There are other
dancing frogs in Central America and Southeast Asia, but the Indian
family, known by the scientific name Micrixalidae, evolved separately
about 85 million years ago.
Biju and his team had
long been baffled about the frogs’ mating patterns, after searching
years around the forest floor for egg clutches without success. But one
late October day in 2011 they witnessed a rare tryst, and saw the female
immediately bury her eggs once fertilized. This confirmed the frogs
were indeed breeding only after stream levels had come down, and
underlined how vulnerable they might be to changes in rainfall or water
availability.
These are tiny,
delicate frogs — no bigger than a walnut — and can easily be swept away
in a gushing mountain stream. So breeding happens only once the level of
a stream levels drops to the point where the water babbles over
boulders and stones, he explained. If streams hold less water or dry out
too early, the frogs get caught without the right conditions to breed.
“Compared with other
frogs, these are so sensitive to this habitat that any change might be
devastating for them,” Biju said. “Back in 2006, we saw maybe 400 to 500
hopping around during the egg-laying season. But each year there were
less, and in the end even if you worked very hard it was difficult to
catch even 100.”
The Western Ghats,
older than the Himalayas, is among the world’s most biologically
exciting regions, holding at least a quarter of all Indian species. Yet
in recent decades, the region has faced a constant assault by iron and
bauxite mining, water pollution, unregulated farming and loss of habitat
to human settlements.
A 2010 report by
India’s Environment Ministry also said the Ghats were likely to be
hard-hit by changing rainfall patterns due to climate change, and more
recent scientific studies have also suggested monsoon patterns will grow
increasingly erratic.
India’s government has
been working to establish a vast environmental protection zone across
the Ghats to limit polluting industrial activities and human
encroachment, but it put the latest proposal on hold earlier this year.
Meanwhile, as India’s
population has grown to a staggering 1.2 billion, at least 25 per cent
of the forests have vanished from the Ghats, which is now home to more
than 325 of the world’s threatened species of plants, birds, amphibians,
reptiles and fish.
Many of these newly
discovered frogs could soon be joining them, Biju said. Many of the 24
known Indian dancing frog species lives only in a single, small area.
Seven were in what Biju described as highly degraded habitats where
logging or new plantations were taking over, while another 12 species
were in areas that appeared in ecological decline.
Biju’s determination,
or even obsession, with documenting as many new frog species as possible
stems from his fear that many will vanish as “unnamed extinctions”
before scientists ever learn they exist. Scientists believe Earth has
about 8.7 million distinct plant and animal species, but they have
documented only 1.5 million.
Amphibians are
particularly vulnerable. At least one-third of the world’s known 6,000
frog species are threatened with extinction from habitat loss,
pollution, changing temperatures or exotic diseases spread by invasive
animals and pests, according to Global Wildlife Conservation.
Sonali Garg one of the
study’s co-authors, said her family initially thought she was crazy for
wanting to study frogs. “But slowly, they’re becoming aware of how
important and special frogs are,” she said. “Slowly, I’m converting
them.”
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