What can your support achieve?

£5
Microchip to monitor a small UK mammal
£20
2km of chilli fencing in Assam
£100
Weekly fuel of a rhino ranger patrol vehicle
£200
Honorary Wildlife Warden two weeks salary
Click here to act
This year
11448.2262943
extinctions
This year
8711895363.02
tonnes of co2 emitted

This year
12257931.1011
acres of forest lost

Saving frogs in Madagascar (part2)

There is a strong and firm commitment by the European Association of Zoo and Aquaria (EAZA) to support conservation programmes in Madagascar and Chester Zoo is keen to take a key role being active in amphibian conservation in the island.

FrogsThis is going to be part of our global conservation plan for Amphibian Conservation here at Chester Zoo as one of our Field Programmes.

The approach to Amphibian Conservation will be multi-faceted and capacity building in terms of training is essential to start seeing in-country initiatives develop in the medium/long term. From this course we hope to start seeing colleagues who will champion species programmes in the country who will implement the knowledge of the species in captivity and how to react to an eventual outbreak of chytrid or a catastrophe  such as the loss of habitat.

But the experience of keeping Malagasy amphibians in the zoo world is pretty modest. Surprisingly, the interest in Malagasy colorful frogs is very high but sadly there is very little known regarding keeping and breeding them.

During the development of the A Conservation Strategy for the Amphibians of Madagascar (ACSAM; http://www.sahonagasy.org/acsam) there was an analysis of the current knowledge on keeping amphibians and only half a dozen were regularly bred for several generations…  we only have another 285 species to learn how to breed…

FrogsThe approach to gaining the knowledge regarding breeding all these species is by classifying them according to their different breeding strategies and extrapolating the knowledge of breeding one of them for the rest of the group. 

Twelve different breeding strategies have been defined which would incorporate the diversity of Malagasy amphibians. The first step would involve the most highly threatened species for each of the breeding strategies - to bring them into captivity to learn how to keep them but in almost all cases this would be impossible. We will not have enough founders and we cannot take the risk of losing individuals during this period. So the plan will be to bring in alternative, named analogues, close species having a similar breeding strategy. These are going to be the candidates for the next breeding programmes after the course.

 Gerardo Garcia in Montserrat with a Mountain Chicken

 

 

I am Gerardo Garcia and I Act for Wildlife

 

Comments

There are currently no comments on this post

Post a Comment