This week scientists found a frog
long-since believed and feared to be extinct. The Bururi long-fingered frog, or
Cardioglossa Cyaneospila, last documented
to have been seen in 1949, was miraculously rediscovered in a southwestern Burundi
forest, located in East Africa. The researchers who claimed the honor of
rediscovering the species belonged to the California Academy of Sciences. David
Blackburn, one of the two leaders leading the research expedition, was the
actual one to find the frog, and surprisingly, he claims that he was expecting
to rediscover the long-lost species as far back as December. Blackburn,
recounting the story of how he found the Bururi long-fingered frog, said that
he first thought he heard the frog’s call, and then walked in that direction,
and after pushing aside some bushes, the frog was sitting perfectly on a log. Cardioglossa Cyaneospila is about one and a half inches long, and is grayish
blue in color, and is covered with black splotches. David Blackburn stated that
he also knew that the frog was male upon capturing it, as he determined its sex
from the male’s very distinctive “ring-finger,” an unusually long fourth toe that
is covered in spines after which the frog species is named.
The researchers claimed that they
could hear other of the species’ frog calls, and although the research team was
only able to find one of the species, they collected the frog and returned it
the academy’s herpetological collection. The research team plans to use it for genetic studies to figure out how long Cardioglossa Cyaneospila and its relatives in Cameroon have
been genetically isolated from each other. The frogs seem to have chosen for their habitat an intriguing spot for
herpetologists, as Burundi borders the vast Congo River Basin, the Great Rift
Valley and Lake Tanganyika, the world's second-largest freshwater lake. Blackburn and his research team have also
found dozens of other amphibians in Burundi, many of which had never been
identified in the country. They also discovered some "new" species
that had yet to be identified. This is largely believed to be a result of the
fact that Burundi has until this point been largely unexplored by
herpetologists.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/03/bururi-long-fingered-frog_n_1400277.html
1 comment:
Interesting. I do wonder about the researchers collecting the one frog they caught however. Seems like some photos and a toe-clip may have been a safer decision!
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