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56 Record(s) Found. Displaying Page 1:
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Endangered Miss. frogs get a break in the weather
Currently 0/5
By JANET McCONNAUGHEY, Associated Press Writer Sat Oct 11, 1:47 PM ET NEW ORLEANS - Pick up a Mississippi gopher frog and it covers its eyes with its forefeet, like someone afraid to see what's coming next. And for at least a decade, it's had a good reason not to look. ADVERTISEMENT if(window.yzq_d==null)window.yzq_d=new ...
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Endangered Miss. frogs get a break...
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Frog News
Submitted on 14-Oct-08 3:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Amphibians 'afloat and fighting'
Currently 4/5
Amphibians 'afloat and fighting' By Richard Black Environment correspondent, BBC News website, Barcelona Almost three years ago, I sat in a hotel conference room in Washington DC and heard that it would cost nearly half a billion dollars to save the world's amphibians. Cheaper than the Iraq invasion, tiny compared to the Wall Street crunch - but a lot of money nevertheless. Here at the World Conservation ...
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Amphibians 'afloat and fighting'
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 14-Oct-08 2:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Study: Insecticide decimates tadpoles
Currently 5/5
Study: Insecticide decimates tadpoles Published: Oct. 6, 2008 at 4:02 PM Order reprints | Print Story | Email to a Friend | Post a Comment .content_embed { float: right; padding: 8px; width: 280px; margin: 0 0 8px 8px; border: 1px solid #ccc; background: #fff; } .photo_embed { float: right; width: 301px; margin: 0 0 8px 8px; background: #fff; } .video_embed { float: right; width: 301px; margin: 0 0 8px 8px; background: #fff; } PITTSBURGH, Oct. 6 (UPI) -- A ...
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Study: Insecticide decimates...
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 8-Oct-08 3:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Australian researchers discover elusive frog
Currently 0/5
KRISTEN GELINEAU, Associated Press Writer Thu Sep 11, 3:25 AM ET SYDNEY, Australia - A tiny frog species thought by many experts to be extinct has been rediscovered alive and well in a remote area of Australia's tropical north, researchers said Thursday. The 1.5 inch-long Armoured Mistfrog had not been seen since 1991, and many experts assumed it had been wiped out by a devastating fungus that struck northern Queensland state. But two months ago, a doctoral student at James Cook ...
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Australian researchers discover...
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Frog News
Submitted on 22-Sep-08 10:00 AM by Rachel Rommel
Frog species sprout claws on demand
Currently 5/5
Tue Jun 24, 6:02 AM ET WASHINGTON (Reuters) - At least 11 species of African frogs carry a built-in concealed weapon -- they can sprout claws on demand to fight off attackers, U.S. researchers reported on Monday. When threatened, the frogs can puncture their own skin with sharp bones in their toes that they then use to claw their attackers, David Blackburn and colleagues at Harvard University reported. "It's surprising enough to find a frog with claws," Blackburn, a graduate ...
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Frog species sprout claws on demand
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Frog News
Submitted on 24-Jun-08 9:00 AM by Rachel Rommel
World's Amphibians Under Assault
Currently 2/5
The first images that come to mind may be unassuming brown newts or garden-variety green frogs, but amphibians cover a much grander spectrum. Among about 6,000 species of frogs, salamanders and caecilians (legless animals, pronounced like "Sicilians") are some of the world's most bizarre animals: Giant Chinese salamanders, two meters (6 feet) in length; the "hairy frog" of Cameroon, which not only looks like it sports hair, but also can break its own ...
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World's Amphibians Under Assault
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 18-Jun-08 8:30 AM by Rachel Rommel
Let's hear three croaks for frogs
Currently 5/5
The amphibians get some love from environmental groups trying to protect them. By BRENNA MALONEY, Washington Post Last update: June 13, 2008 - 3:39 PM document.write(''); document.write(''); var partnerID=252491; var _hb=1; window.onerror=function(){clickURL=document.location.href;return true;} if(!self.clickURL) clickURL=parent.location.href; It's tough to be a frog these days -- or a toad, for that matter: 2008 has been named the Year of the Frog by a ...
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Let's hear three croaks for frogs
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 18-Jun-08 8:00 AM by Rachel Rommel
Students rally to save frogs
Currently 5/5
Saturday, June 14, 2008 Royal Oak Students rally to save frogs They donate money to zoo's conservation center Shawn D. Lewis / The Detroit News ROYAL OAK -- Emily Joyce is fond of frogs and hopes to save them from extinction. Her seventh-grade class at Larson Middle School in Troy recently presented a $500 check to the Detroit Zoo's National Amphibian Conservation Center. "I really want to help save the frogs because they make the world a better place," said Emily, 13, of Troy. ...
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Students rally to save frogs
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Frog News
Submitted on 18-Jun-08 8:00 AM by Rachel Rommel
There’s much to zoo at the Knoxville Zoo
Currently 5/5
KNOXVILLE – There’s much to zoo at the Knoxville Zoo In honor of the Association of Zoos and Aquarium’s 2008 Year of the Frog, Knoxville Zoo has introduced “Toadally Frogs” as one of its newest exhibits. Visitors will have the opportunity to visit a chorus of croakers in this “ribbeting” exhibit. Also new at the zoo is Bloomin’ Butterfly Gardens, where visitors can immerse themselves in a flurry of butterflies floating around the exhibit. Other natural exhibits include The Boyd Family Red ...
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There’s much to zoo at the...
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Amphibians in Zoos
Submitted on 18-Jun-08 8:00 AM by Rachel Rommel
Many kinds of frogs – including toads – face extinction
Currently 1/5
Many kinds of frogs – including toads – face extinction BRENNA MALONEY; The Washington Post Published: June 10th, 2008 01:00 AM It’s tough to be a frog these days – or a toad, for that matter: 2008 has been named the Year of the Frog by a number of environmental groups to raise awareness of the worldwide plight of amphibians. What, you didn’t know they were in trouble? Between one-third and one-half of all amphibian species are threatened with extinction, the conservation group ...
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Many kinds of frogs –...
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 12-Jun-08 9:00 AM by
Froggie goes a-courtin'
Currently 0/5
The Budgett's frog had two fangs and screamed, so, of course, producers of the 30-second television spot touting the Frog Bog at the Newport Aquarium named it Psychofrog. "He tries to bite you," said Greg Newberry, president of O'Bryonville-based Animal Instinct Advertising, which has launched a multimedia advertising campaign for the Newport Aquarium. • Hear the frogs OAS_AD('ArticleFlex_1'); '); } // --> document.write(""); #smabe a:link{color:#ffffff;}#smabe ...
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Froggie goes a-courtin'
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Frog News
Submitted on 28-May-08 3:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Museum exhibition addresses amphibian death, habitat loss
Currently 0/5
A new Cleveland Museum of Natural History exhibition takes a closer look at amphibians, the threat of extinction they face and the role of humans in both their decline and survival. The exhibition, "Toad-ily Frogs," will be on display in the museum's Corning Gallery through Sept. 28. Scientists have reported on the decline of amphibians for some time. But the situation is reaching crisis proportions - presently one-half to one-third of all amphibian species worldwide could become extinct ...
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Museum exhibition addresses...
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 28-May-08 3:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Jeff Corwin and Panamanian Biologists Find Frog Feared to Be on Edge of Extinction During Filming of Animal Planet Film 'THE VANISHING FROG'
Currently 4/5
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Jeff Corwin and Panamanian...
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 5-May-08 2:00 PM by
Solomon Island leaf froglet
Currently 5/5
This Lincoln Park Zoo handout shows a tiny Solomon Island leaf froglet as it delicately perches on the fingertip of its animal keeper at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, Illinois on May 1, 2008. Hatched on February 16, this species is particularly unique as it hatches as a perfectly formed tiny frog rather than a tadpole. It is one of the few species of frogs in the world that do this. Native to Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands this species is not yet endangered, however they do face many ...
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Solomon Island leaf froglet
Categories:
Amphibians in Zoos
Submitted on 5-May-08 2:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
2008: Leap Year and Year of the Frog. Coincidence or conspiracy?
Currently 0/5
By FRAN HENRY , Newhouse News Service Sunday, April 6, 2008 LoadRelated(); Neither - just clever timing by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, which is staging the Year of the Frog. Association members have committed this year to stirring up interest in the plight of the world's amphibians - frogs, salamanders, newts, toads and caecilians, which look like worms or eels and live in tropical areas. Nearly one-third of the world's 6,000 species are in danger of ...
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2008: Leap Year and Year of the...
Categories:
Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 5-May-08 2:00 PM by
Slipping Away
Currently 0/5
Frogs, salamanders and other amphibians are sliding into oblivion by Sara Shipley Hiles © Brad Wilson/Atlanta Botanical Garden (captive) In a cloud forest in Panama, hundreds of frogs turn up dead, the life sucked out of them by a strange fungus. In the wetlands of northwest Iowa, where hunters once collected 20 million frogs a year for their meaty legs, there is only one leopard frog left for every thousand frogs the pioneers saw. In southern Missouri's mountain ...
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Slipping Away
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 5-May-08 2:00 PM by
Biologists turn to captivity to try to save Panama's golden frog from deadly fungus
Currently 0/5
EL VALLE DE ANTON, Panama: The golden frog is a symbol of Panama — revered by indigenous cultures in the past and the lucky emblem on lottery tickets today. Now threatened by a lethal fungus that has killed other species, the national treasure may be facing life in captivity. A pair of biologists have decided that plucking the frogs from the cloud forests and putting them in quarantine is the only way to save them. Their goal is to eventually return the frogs to the wild, but these ...
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Biologists turn to captivity to...
Categories:
Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 5-May-08 2:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Jeff Corwin and Panamanian Biologists Find Frog Feared to Be on Edge of Extinction During Filming of Animal Planet Film 'THE VANISHING FROG'
Currently 0/5
Corwin and Biologists from the Houston Zoo Find Harlequin Frogs, Thought to be the Last of Their Kind, In Dense Rainforest of Panama - SILVER SPRING, Md., April 30 /PRNewswire/ -- While trekking through a remote rainforest in Omar Torrijos National Park in central Panama for the upcoming Animal Planet documentary THE VANISHING FROG, wildlife biologist Jeff Corwin, along with biologists Bill Konstant and Edgardo Griffith of the Houston Zoo, uncovered a small population of a critically ...
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Jeff Corwin and Panamanian...
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Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 1-May-08 12:00 PM by Rachel Rommel
Photographer left with frog in throat
Currently 0/5
Ross Eastgate 18Apr08 HANDSOME, a 20-year-old tree frog gave photographer Aldwyn Altuney more than she bargained for at a media launch. HANDSOME, a 20-year-old tree frog gave photographer Aldwyn Altuney more than she bargained for at a media launch. Handsome is Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary's Year of the Frog ambassador and was appearing at the launch of Inkspot Printers' super new printing press. As soon as Aldwyn had taken her photo, Handsome leapt at her, the first time he had ...
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Photographer left with frog in...
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Frog News
Submitted on 22-Apr-08 8:00 AM by Rachel Rommel
Nature calls and frogs, scientists, answer
Currently 5/5
By MARK DAVIS The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Published on: 04/10/08 MONTICELLO — The moon was just a sliver of silver in the immense indigo when the chorus started. It came from the shadows, where hardwoods are in bud. Eep! Eep! Eep-eep-eep!... Mark Davis / AJC staff (ENLARGE) Biologist Kristina Sorensen keeps track of the temperature outside Wednesday 4/9/08. ...
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Nature calls and frogs,...
Categories:
Amphibian Extinction Crisis
Submitted on 16-Apr-08 9:45 AM by Rachel Rommel
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