The Independent, 15 October 2004
The polluted planet: Alarm as global study finds one-third of amphibians
face extinction
By Steve Connor Science Editor

They were the first animals with backbones to walk on land. They
witnessed the rise and fall of the dinosaurs and were present at the
birth of a bipedal ape who went on to become the most destructive
species the planet has ever known.

Amphibians - frogs, toads, newts and salamanders - are among the longest
surviving animals on earth, yet something dramatic now threatens that
longevity. And mankind is responsible.

A global study revealed yesterday that almost a third of amphibians face
extinction - and pollution is cited as the biggest cause. The three-year
survey, involving 500 scientists from more than 60 countries, has found
that a third of the 5,743 known species are threatened with being wiped
out and at least 427 are so critically endangered that they could
disappear tomorrow.

The animals are so sensitive to the man-made environment that scientists
have likened them to the canary in a coal mine - songbirds that fell
silent, killed in the presence of odourless gas. The latest and most
comprehensive study of amphibians around the world has shown that for
many species of frogs and their nearest relatives the singing has
suddenly and inexplicably stopped - and the same bipedal ape is almost
certainly responsible.

"This is a problem way outside what we know," said Simon Stuart of the
World Conservation Union and leader of the study published in the online
version of the journal Science.

Dr Stuart said: "This level of decline is ... extraordinary and serious
because amphibians represent a very important part of the overall
diversity of life. Since most amphibians feel the effects of pollution
before many other forms of life, their rapid decline tells us that one
of earth's most critical life support systems is breaking down."

The figures in the survey are almost certainly underestimates because
more than 22 per cent of the known amphibian species are too poorly
understood for the researchers to reach a reliable conclusion about what
is happening to them.

Populations of almost half of the known amphibian species are in
decline. While 32 per cent of amphibians are threatened with extinction,
only 12 per cent of birds and 23 per cent of mammals are in the same
position. The latest study estimates that up to 122 species have gone
extinct since 1980.

Dr Stuart said that all animal groups undergo a natural "background"
rate of extinction but, in the case of amphibians, the actual loss of
species is equivalent to the total number of background extinctions for
many tens of thousands of years being squeezed into a single century.

"The bottom line is that there's almost no evidence of recovery and no
known techniques for saving mysteriously declining species in the wild.
It leaves conservation biologists in a quandary," Dr Stuart said.

Amphibians are considered uniquely sensitive to man-made changes in the
environment. Their moist, porous skins are vulnerable to water-borne
toxins and infections, and their reliance on two habitats - freshwater
and land - means they cannot survive properly without both.

Scientists have suggested many possible reasons for the decline.
Pollution of both water and the atmosphere, human exploitation for food
and medicine and habitat destruction all pose serious threats.

But it is clear that amphibians are also disappearing from what appear
to be pristine habitats. At one protected site in Costa Rica, for
instance, some 40 per cent of amphibians disappeared over a short period
in the late 1980s. Other losses occurred almost simultaneously in Costa
Rica, Ecuador and Venezuela.

It is this so-called "enigmatic decline" that poses the biggest problem
for conservationists simply because they have little idea about what
needs to be done to address the problem.

The authors of the report say: "Enigmatic decline species present the
greatest challenge for conservation because there are no known
techniques for ensuring their survival in the wild. Most enigmatic
declines have been recorded from the Americas south to Ecuador and
Brazil, Australia and New Zealand, but they are spreading, for instance
to Peru, Chile, Dominica, Spain and Tanzania."

Many of these mysterious disappearances seem to take place in tropical
habitats involving amphibians living in mountain streams. Some studies
suggest they may be linked with the global spread of a fungus called
chytridiomycosis, which may be exacerbated by global warming. What is
most worrying is that the decline in amphibians is occurring across the
world.

Bruce Young, a zoologist who took part in the global amphibian
assessment, said: "We already knew amphibians were in trouble, but this
assessment removes any doubt about the scale of the problem." Dr Achim
Steiner, director general of the World Conservation Union, said: "The
fact that one third of amphibians are in a precipitous decline tells us
that we are rapidly moving towards a potentially epidemic number of
extinctions."

Russell Mittermeier, president of Conservation International, said:
"Amphibians are one of nature's best indicators of overall environmental
health. Their catastrophic decline serves as a warning that we are in a
period of significant environmental degradation."

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