Environmental Affairs releases endangered Pickersgill’s reed frogs back into the wild

Second batch of endangered Pickersgill’s reed frogs released back into the wild

The Department of Environmental Affairs (DEA), Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife (EKZNW)) and the Johannesburg Zoo this week released the second batch of captive-bred endangered Pickersgill’s Reed Frogs (Hyperolius pickersgilli), at River Horse Valley in eThekwini, KwaZulu-Natal.

The team that led the re-introduction of about 50 frogs on 5 March 2019 was headed by Ian du Plessis, the Curator of the Project to reintroduce the amphibians back into their former habitat at the Johannesburg Zoo.  He was supported by scientists from Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife, the Endandered Wildlife Trust (EWT) and the Department of Environmental Affairs.  

Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife initiated this ground-breaking programme by requesting the Johannesburg Zoo to breed a sustainable insurance population of the species. The project has included collecting wild specimens and breeding them at the zoo in order to maintain a healthy and genetically diverse “insurance” population.

About 200 captive-bred offspring were released in the Mount Moreland and Prospecton areas – a first for South Africa – on 17 September 2018.

Over the past decade EKZNW has engaged with other government departments, parastatals, municipalities and conservancies to ensure that the Pickersgill’s Reed Frog population is restored and the species brought back from the brink of extinction. This approach followed the deadly outbreak of the Chytrid fungi (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) in the early 2000’s, leading to the death of amphibian populations in many parts of the world. 

The two releases meet a goal of the Pickersgill’s Reed Frog Biodiversity Management Plan to  improve the conservation status of the species so that it can eventually be downlisted to Least Concern, and to improve its protection as part of meeting international biodiversity objectives such as the Aichi targets through applied conservation action. 

Amphibians play integral roles in most ecosystems and are presently the most threatened Class of vertebrates globally, with approximately one third of all known species Red Listed by the IUCN. This situation is reflected in South Africa, with 30% of the country’s frog species listed under a threatened category.

Overall, 43% of South African frog species are endemic to the country. Of these, 35% are in a threatened category, and all but one of the threatened species are endemics.

The highest species richness for frogs occurs in KwaZulu-Natal, an area that has been recognised as being important for both frog endemism and having high levels of human activity, particularly in the coastal regions.

Enquiries:
Albi Modise
Cell: 083 490 2871

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