The Baw Baw frog of Victoria's central highlands will likely go extinct in the next 20 years, new research shows. (Supplied: Damian Goodall) |
Key Points
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A team of 29 scientists from across Australia has warned that a number of frog species will go extinct in the next two decades if no action is taken.
Eight species are at "high risk" of extinction in the next 20 years, but four of those are likely to be already lost, according to the research published in the journal Pacific Conservation Biology today.
The study ranked the extinction probability for Australia's threatened frogs to identify the species most in need of intervention, according to study author Graeme Gillespie of the Northern Territory Department of Environment, Parks and Water Security.
Dr Gillespie said frogs would soon follow the path of Australian reptiles, mammals, birds and plants that have already become extinct, adding to the country's already dire biodiversity record.
"The evidence is there, the patterns are there, this study tells us we're about to lose more," he said.The study's lead author, Hayley Geyle of the NESP Threatened Species Recovery Hub, said urgent action was needed to protect these unique species.
"Current resourcing and management is just not cutting it in terms of preventing declines," she said.
Disease causing extinction
The northern tinker frog normally inhabits montane rainforest in the wet tropics of Queensland, but is thought to already be extinct. (Supplied: Hal Cogger) |
The amphibian disease chytridiomycosis (or chrytrid), caused by the fungal skin pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis,has likely already driven four species extinct, according to Dr Gillespie.
"This disease has been responsible for the extinction of hundreds of species of frogs around the world, including in Australia, and the decline of many others," he said.
"For the species which we believe are extinct, chytrid is probably the exclusive factor."
But for many of our other critically endangered frogs, the threats of climate change, invasive species and habitat loss are also at play.
"What these things do is they reduce the overall resilience of the species to cope with a new threat," Dr Gillespie said.
"If a frog occurs on one mountaintop like Kosciuszko, there is a chance for the entire species to be knocked out by one event like a fire."
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Species Likely Extinct
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"We think the rainfall deficits we've had in south-east Queensland have resulted in the local extirpation of populations of some of those species," Dr Meyer said.
Dr Meyer said the study clarified just how dire the situation was for a large number of Australian frogs.
"We risk losing additional species in a very short time space, perhaps shorter than people realise," said Dr Meyer, who was not one of the authors.
Disparity in frog conservation investment
After the Black Summer bush fires tore across Mt Kosciuszko in 2019/20, a rescue mission was launched to see how the critically endangered southern corroboree frogs had fared in their protected enclosures in the alpine bogs.
Several enclosures were destroyed and close to two-thirds of the frogs died, but scientists hope frog numbers could bounce back thanks to an extensive captive breeding program for the species.
The southern corroboree frog has decades of research and an extensive captive breeding program behind it. (ABC North Queensland: Sophie Kesteven) |
"There's definitely a big disparity in those frogs on the list in terms of the amount of investment that's gone into securing their future," Ms Geyle said.
"So one of the key actions would be to put in place more research and monitoring of the populations."
Dr Meyer agreed that because some species receive more attention than others, we don't have a good understanding of their vulnerability to threats.
"We perhaps don't appreciate just how how much of a knife edge they're on, until they fall over the other side," he said.Captive breeding challenges
Even for species that do have captive management programs underway, their release into the wild is not immediately guaranteed.
The Kroombit tinker frog that lives in rainforest streams in central Queensland is the species most likely to go extinct by 2040 according to the new study, after the four species already believed to have disappeared.
Dr Meyer has been studying the frog since the mid 1990s and has witnessed its decline in the wild.
This is the first metamorphosed Kroombit tinker frog in captivity after almost two decades of trying. (Supplied: Mik Vella) |
"We're currently putting together a formal captive release plan strategy to make sure that we get [the release] right," he said.
"We're going to give it a red-hot go and hopefully we can buy the species some time and maybe give it a brighter future."
A midnight frog chorus in Wadawarrung Country in Victoria 1h 9m |
"We can build resilience in these species by addressing management issues that we do have some control over," he said.
"In some cases, it's just a matter of putting in appropriate fencing or undertaking appropriate pest management.
"We know how to control pigs. It's not technologically very difficult."
Relocating frogs to safer habitats or even wild refuges is another potential solution.
The armoured mist frog was thought to be extinct until it was rediscovered in 2008, and has been translocated into an area free from chytrid fungus. (Supplied: Conrad Hoskin)
Dr Gillespie also thinks crisis funding for threatened species could be put to better use.
"If the resources that were being thrown around in response to those [2019] fires had been spread out uniformly over the previous 10 years, we would've had a better outcome," he said.
"We would have been more informed about the likely impacts, and there would have been more resilience in the system.
"But a big bag of money gets thrown at it, it gets spent in a short period of time, and then it goes back down to being inadequate until the next crisis."
A spokesperson for the federal environment department said they welcomed the research findings, and that the government was committed to recovering threatened species.
They said government programs were "increasingly incorporating monitoring for on-ground projects to better assess the outcomes of Australian government investment and to inform future actions".
Links"In some cases, it's just a matter of putting in appropriate fencing or undertaking appropriate pest management.
"We know how to control pigs. It's not technologically very difficult."
Relocating frogs to safer habitats or even wild refuges is another potential solution.
The armoured mist frog was thought to be extinct until it was rediscovered in 2008, and has been translocated into an area free from chytrid fungus. (Supplied: Conrad Hoskin)
Dr Gillespie also thinks crisis funding for threatened species could be put to better use.
"If the resources that were being thrown around in response to those [2019] fires had been spread out uniformly over the previous 10 years, we would've had a better outcome," he said.
"We would have been more informed about the likely impacts, and there would have been more resilience in the system.
"But a big bag of money gets thrown at it, it gets spent in a short period of time, and then it goes back down to being inadequate until the next crisis."
A spokesperson for the federal environment department said they welcomed the research findings, and that the government was committed to recovering threatened species.
They said government programs were "increasingly incorporating monitoring for on-ground projects to better assess the outcomes of Australian government investment and to inform future actions".
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