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  Reptile and Amphibian Research
     
 
 
 
Dr. Joe Mendelson in the Field
   
  Zoo Scientist featured in Science
 

Reptiles & Amphibians in our Collection

  Research in Latin America
  Turtle Survivial Alliance
  Information on the Panama Amphibian Crisis
(PDF document)

The Reptile and Amphibian department is working very hard at the Zoo to save critically endangered amphibians from around the world. No institution has ever attempted a program of this scale before, so we truly are world leaders in conservation, action and research. Panama is a particular area of concentration for the Amphibian Rescue program. The Rescue program has a full-time staff of Panamanian and American herpetologists working at two sites in Panama: El Copé, where a deadly fungal disease has devastated local frog populations; and El Valle, where the fungus is currently absent, but is predicted to invade in the next year. The staff are finding a few frogs at El Copé and have been successful in treating them with the veterinary protocol devised by Brad Lock, assistant curator of herpetology at Zoo Atlanta. The news is much better at El Valle, where teams are finding an amazing variety of frogs, and have been successful in establishing them in captivity at our temporary field-station.

On June 21st, Dr. Joe Mendelson and Sean Graham of Zoo Atlanta and Ron Gagliardo of the Atlanta Botanical Garden returned to Atlanta with the first rescue colonies of frogs. The logistics were a bit bumpy, but they were able to get 125 frogs of 21 species safely out of the wild (where they have no chance of survival) and now established as the first and only captive survival assurance colonies that exist for them. Export permits for these species have never before been granted by Panama, and most have never been kept in captivity. So, we really are breaking new ground here!

At the Zoo, we now have a variety of tree frogs, poison frogs, glass frogs (yes, they really are transparent!), and rain frogs. Coming soon are marsupial frogs (with an egg-pouch on their back), giant tree frogs, and even the impossibly rare and bizarre casque-headed frog.

 
 

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