Disappearing frogs Kerry M. Kriger

Have you ever heard the sound of frogs

calling at night?

For hundreds of millions of years,

this croaking lullaby has filled the nighttime air.

But recent studies suggest

that these frogs are in danger

of playing their final note.

Over the past few decades,

amphibian populations have been rapidly disappearing worldwide.

Nearly one-third of the world’s amphibian species

are endanger of extinction,

and over 100 species have already disappeared.

But don’t worry, there’s still hope.

Before we get into how to save the frogs,

let’s start by taking a look

at why they’re disappearing

and why it’s important to keep them around.

Habitat destruction is the number one problem

for frog populations around the world.

There are seven billion humans on the planet,

and we compete with frogs for habitat.

We build cities, suburbs, and farms

on top of frog habitat

and chop forests

and drain the wetlands

that serve as home

for numerous amphibian populations.

Climate change alters precipitation levels,

drying up ponds, streams, and cloud forests.

As the Earth’s human population continues to grow,

so will the threats amphibians face.

There are a variety of other factors

contributing to the frogs' decline.

Over-harvesting for the pet and food trade

results in millions of frogs

being taken out of the wild each year.

Invasive species,

such as non-native trout and crawfish,

eat native frogs.

Humans are facilitating the spread

of infectious diseases

by shipping over 100 million amphibians

around the world each year

for use as food, pets, bait,

and in laboratories and zoos,

with few regulations or quarantines.

One of these diseases,

chytridiomycosis,

has driven stream-dwelling amphibian populations

to extinction

in Africa,

Australia,

Europe,

and North, Central, and South America.

On top of all these problems,

we add hundreds of millions of kilograms of pesticides

to our ecosystems each year.

And these chemicals are easily absorbed

through amphibians' permeable skin,

causing immunosuppression,

or a weakened immune system,

and developmental deformities.

Okay, so why are these little green guys

worth keeping around?

Frogs are important for a multitude of reasons.

They’re an integral part of the food web,

eating flies, ticks, mosquitoes,

and other disease vectors,

thus, protecting us against malaria,

dengue fever,

and other illnesses.

Tadpoles keep waterways clean

by feeding on algae,

reducing the demand

on our community’s filtration systems

and keeping our cost of water low.

Frogs serve as a source of food

for birds, fish, snakes, dragonflies, and even monkeys.

When frogs disappear,

the food web is disturbed,

and other animals can disappear as well.

Amphibians are also extremely important

in human medicine.

Over ten percent of the Nobel prizes

in physiology and medicine

have gone to researchers

whose work depended on amphibians.

Some of the antimicrobial peptides

on frog skin can kill HIV,

some act as pain killers,

and others serve as natural mosquito repellents.

Many discoveries await us

if we can save the frogs,

but when a frog species disappears,

so does any promise it holds

for improving human health.

Fortunately, there are lots of ways you can help,

and the best place to start

is by improving your ecological footprint

and day-to-day actions.

The next time you listen to that nighttime lullaby,

don’t think of it as just another background noise,

hear it as a call for help,

sung in perfect croaking harmony.

你有没有听过晚上青蛙叫的声音

亿万年来,

这首呱呱叫的摇篮曲充斥着夜空。

但最近的研究表明

,这些青蛙有

演奏它们最后音符的危险。

在过去的几十年里,

两栖动物种群在全球范围内迅速消失。

世界上近三分之一的

两栖动物濒临灭绝

,100多个物种已经消失。

不过别担心,希望还是有的。

在我们讨论如何拯救青蛙之前,

让我们先来

看看它们为什么会消失

以及为什么让它们留在身边很重要。

栖息地破坏是

世界各地青蛙种群的头号问题。

地球上有 70 亿人

,我们与青蛙争夺栖息地。

我们在青蛙栖息地之上建造城市、郊区和农场

砍伐森林

并排干

作为众多两栖动物种群家园的湿地。

气候变化改变了降水量,

使池塘、溪流和云雾林干涸。

随着地球人口的持续增长,

两栖动物面临的威胁也将如此。

还有许多其他

因素导致青蛙的衰退。

宠物和食品贸易的过度捕捞

导致每年有数百万只青蛙

被带出野外。

入侵物种,

如非本地鳟鱼和小龙虾,

吃本地青蛙。

人类每年通过在世界各地

运送超过 1 亿只两栖动物

作为食物、宠物、诱饵

以及在实验室和动物园中

使用,从而促进传染病的传播,几乎没有法规或隔离。

其中一种疾病,壶

菌病,

已经

导致非洲、

澳大利亚、

欧洲

以及北美洲、中美洲和南美洲的溪流两栖动物种群灭绝。

除了所有这些问题之外,

我们

每年还会为我们的生态系统增加数亿公斤的杀虫剂。

这些化学物质很容易

通过两栖动物的可渗透皮肤吸收,

导致免疫抑制

或免疫系统减弱

和发育畸形。

好吧,那为什么这些小绿人

值得留着呢?

出于多种原因,青蛙很重要。

它们是食物网不可或缺的一部分,

吃苍蝇、蜱虫、蚊子

和其他疾病媒介,

从而保护我们免受疟疾、

登革热

和其他疾病的侵害。

蝌蚪

通过以藻类为食来保持水道清洁,

减少

对我们社区过滤系统的需求

并降低我们的用水成本。

青蛙

是鸟类、鱼类、蛇、蜻蜓甚至猴子的食物来源。

当青蛙消失时

,食物网就会受到干扰

,其他动物也会消失。

两栖动物在人类医学中也极为重要

超过 10% 的

诺贝尔生理学和

医学奖授予了

依赖两栖动物开展工作的研究人员。

青蛙皮肤上的一些抗菌肽可以杀死艾滋病毒,

一些可以作为止痛药,

还有一些可以作为天然驱蚊剂。

如果我们能够拯救青蛙,许多发现等待着我们,

但是当一种青蛙物种消失时,

它对改善人类健康的任何承诺也会随之消失。

幸运的是,您可以通过多种方式提供帮助

,最好的起点

是改善您的生态足迹

和日常行动。

下次你听那首夜间摇篮曲时,

不要认为它只是另一种背景噪音,

把它当作求救的呼声,

用完美的呱呱和声唱出来。