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Dead_Parrot

(14,478 posts)
Wed Mar 28, 2012, 01:18 AM Mar 2012

Elusive long-fingered frog found after 62 years

What's with the frogs this month?

SAN FRANCISCO (March 27, 2012) – Herpetologists from the California Academy of Sciences and University of Texas at El Paso discovered a single specimen of the Bururi long-fingered frog (Cardioglossa cyaneospila) during a research expedition to Burundi in December 2011. The frog was last seen by scientists in 1949 and was feared to be extinct after decades of turmoil in the tiny East African nation.

For biologists studying the evolution and distribution of life in Africa, Burundi sits at an intriguing geographic crossroads since it borders the vast Congo River Basin, the Great Rift Valley, and the world’s second largest freshwater lake, Lake Tanganyika. Many of the species in its high-elevation forests may be closely related to plants and animals found in Cameroon’s mountains, suggesting that at some point in the past, a cooler climate may have allowed the forests to become contiguous.

Previous knowledge of Burundi’s wildlife came from scientific surveys conducted in the mid-20th century, when the nation was under Belgian administration. But its history since then has been one of political unrest, population growth, and habitat loss. Today, approximately 10 million people occupy an area the size of Massachusetts, giving Burundi one of the highest population densities in Africa.

Academy curator David Blackburn joined his colleague Eli Greenbaum, professor at the University of Texas at El Paso, on the 2011 expedition with the goal of finding Cardioglossa cyaneospila, as well as other amphibians and reptiles first described 60 years ago. To their pleasant surprise, the habitats of the Bururi Forest Reserve in the southwest part of the country were still relatively intact, with populations of rare forest birds and chimpanzees present.




More: http://www.calacademy.org/newsroom/releases/2012/burundi_frog.php

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Elusive long-fingered frog found after 62 years (Original Post) Dead_Parrot Mar 2012 OP
Never thought frogs lived that long obey Mar 2012 #1
The frog isn't that old... ellisonz Mar 2012 #2
no, the frog has probably had spots all along. n/t Joe Shlabotnik Mar 2012 #3
Oh well played sir! Nihil Mar 2012 #4
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