Study: Triple threat paints grim future for frogs
Frogs, salamanders and other amphibians may eventually have no haven left on the globe because of a triple threat of worsening scourges, a new study predicts.
"It's no fun being a frog," said prominent biodiversity conservationist Stuart Pimm of Duke University, who was not part of Hof's study or the USGS effort. "They are getting it from all three different factors."
Hof's study was the first to look at projections of the three threats by geography and see if they overlap. While they overlap some, it is not nearly as much as expected. The wide distribution of threats leaves no refuge for amphibians.
Scientists have long known that amphibians are under attack from a killer fungus, climate change
and shrinking habitat. In the study appearing online Wednesday in the
journal Nature, computer models project that in about 70 years those
three threats will spread, leaving no part of the world immune from one
of the problems.
Frogs seem to have the most worrisome outlook, said study lead author Christian Hof of the Biodiversity and Climate Research Center in Frankfurt.
Meanwhile,
federal scientists in the United States are meeting in St. Louis,
Missouri, this week to monitor the situation and figure out how to
reverse it.
Several important
U.S. amphibian species — boreal toads in the U.S. Rocky Mountains and
the mountain yellow legged frog in the Sierra Nevada Mountains — are
shrinking in numbers, said zoologist Steve Corn, who is part of the U.S.
Geological Survey's Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative. The
western part of the United States has the problem worse than does the
East.
About one-third of the world's amphibian species are known
to be threatened with extinction, and 159 species already have
disappeared, a 2008 international study found."It's no fun being a frog," said prominent biodiversity conservationist Stuart Pimm of Duke University, who was not part of Hof's study or the USGS effort. "They are getting it from all three different factors."
Hof's study was the first to look at projections of the three threats by geography and see if they overlap. While they overlap some, it is not nearly as much as expected. The wide distribution of threats leaves no refuge for amphibians.
The strongest
threats seem to be where the most species of amphibians live,
concentrating the potential loss of diversity, said Hof and Ross Alford, an amphibian expert at James Cook University in Australia, who was not part of the research.
The
biggest threats are seen, mostly from climate change, to frogs and
other amphibians in tropical Africa, northern South America and the
Andes Mountains, areas which Hof calls "climate losers." In the northern
Andes, which have the largest number of frog species in the world, more
than 160 frog species are at risk, he said.
Alford
and other outside scientists said they thought Hof's work might be
overly pessimistic. But studying the geographic distribution of
amphibian threats in the future is important, they said.


