• Lamb and Davis ended up testing a bunch of salamanders, frogs and caecelians - limbless amphibians - for their responses to blue and ultraviolet light. (discovermagazine.com)
  • The first Global Amphibian Assessment, which looked at more than 5,700 species of frogs, toads, salamanders, newts and other amphibians became "pretty much the guiding light of my career," said Apodaca, who now heads the nonprofit group Amphibian and Reptile Conservancy. (wglt.org)
  • Previous to this find, the 87-million-year gap in the fossil record hid the early evolutionary history of caecilians, leading to a decades-long debate amongst scientists over the relationships of caecilians to their amphibian relatives, frogs and salamanders. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Community scientists have joined Woodland Park Zoo to document when and were local frogs, toads, newts and salamanders are breeding in Snohomish and King counties. (zoo.org)
  • Frogs - like other amphibians - live a dual existence, partly on land and partly in water, so they play an important role in worldwide food webs. (usgs.gov)
  • From Living Room to Lily Pad: Is the Fatal Amphibian Chytrid Fungus Spread via Pet Frogs? (scientificamerican.com)
  • Scientists believe that the fungus traveled with the frogs as they were shipped around the world. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Dozens of species of frogs, salamanders and other amphibians quietly disappeared from parts of Latin America in the 1980s and 2000s, with little notice from humans, outside of a small group of ecologists. (news-medical.net)
  • Some frogs, salamanders and other amphibians eat hundreds of mosquito eggs each day. (news-medical.net)
  • Frogs (and toads), salamanders, and Caecilians - a lesser known amphibian looking somewhere between a large worm or a smallish snake - represent the three major groups of amphibians. (planetsave.com)
  • This moist and slimy skin is how amphibians, frogs, salamanders and caecilians breathe-some don't even have lungs at all! (si.edu)
  • Collecting slime is just what it sounds like, with a few extra steps to ensure the amphibians-frogs, in this case-aren't stressed. (si.edu)
  • When amphibians (notably frogs) come in contact with this fungus, it degrades the keratin layer of their skin, causing skin sloughing, lethargy, weight loss and death. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • We've heard the horror stories: a deadly amphibian fungal disease called chytridiomycosis is sweeping through the world's bogs and swamps, claiming the lives of untold numbers of frogs, newts, and salamanders in its wake. (audubon.org)
  • Now, an international team of 114 scientists, led by Northeastern Illinois University and Penn State , reports the most comprehensive study of aging and longevity to date comprising data collected in the wild from 107 populations of 77 species of reptiles and amphibians worldwide. (neiu.edu)
  • Anecdotal evidence exists that some reptiles and amphibians age slowly and have long lifespans, but until now no one has actually studied this on a large scale across numerous species in the wild," said David Miller, senior author and associate professor of wildlife population ecology at Penn State University. (neiu.edu)
  • If we can understand what allows some animals to age more slowly, we can better understand aging in humans, and we can also inform conservation strategies for reptiles and amphibians, many of which are threatened or endangered. (neiu.edu)
  • The world's reptiles and amphibians are experiencing pathogens from several standpoints, including epidemi- dramatic and ongoing losses in biodiversity, changes ology, host immune defenses, wild population effects, that can have substantial effects on ecosystems and and mitigation. (cdc.gov)
  • Many reptiles and amphibians are insectivores orientalis , snake serpentoviruses, and snake Para- and consume various insect pests that can have nega- nanizziopsis , were also highlighted. (cdc.gov)
  • Amadeus is a member of LARS, an organization that works to protect amphibians and reptiles, and LBV (Bavarian Society for the Protection of Birds), another conservation organization. (amphibianark.org)
  • I love reptiles and amphibians. (amphibianark.org)
  • This point was clearly driven home for my co-authors and I in our recent synthesis of conservation threats for California's amphibians and reptiles, where time and again we found that the data we would like to have does not exist. (ucpress.edu)
  • ebird.org (for birds), naherp.com (for amphibians and reptiles), or iNaturalist.org (for virtually everything else). (ucpress.edu)
  • Amphibians may be camouflaged in brown and green, and if so they are prey for birds and reptiles. (wikipedia.org)
  • Skin texture is a key difference between reptiles and amphibians. (si.edu)
  • Reptiles typically have rough and scaly skin while amphibians have moist and slimy skin. (si.edu)
  • Florida has the world's worst problem with invasive reptiles and amphibians, the university said. (wtvr.com)
  • 2008 . Effects of artificial night lighting on amphibians and reptiles in urban environments, pp. 239-256. (utica.edu)
  • Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles. (utica.edu)
  • Cold-blooded animals such as reptiles and amphibians have some of the longest lifespans for their size. (medlineplus.gov)
  • While most research on aging variation in animals has focused on birds and mammals, this team examined 77 different species of reptiles and amphibians in the wild. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Reptiles and amphibians that had protective traits-such as a hard shell, scales, or a venomous bite-aged more slowly than those without them. (medlineplus.gov)
  • In warmer environments, reptiles aged more quickly, while amphibians aged more slowly. (medlineplus.gov)
  • These insights can help inform conservation strategies for reptiles and amphibians in the wild, many of which are threatened or endangered. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Diane Barber, curator at the Fort Worth Zoo, said, "The partnerships between the university and zoos have expanded the role both types of institutions can play in training the next generation of scientists who will be challenged with sustaining the populations of critically endangered species. (msstate.edu)
  • Unfortunately, declines in amphibian populations have occurred worldwide. (usgs.gov)
  • From the early 1980s to the mid-1990s, a deadly fungal pathogen called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis , or 'Bd,' travelled across Costa Rica, devastating amphibian populations. (news-medical.net)
  • The unprecedented expansion in transport infrastructure in the past century has had massive impacts on amphibian populations around the world (Beebee 2013, Glista et al. (froglife.org)
  • Genetic bottlenecks as a result of fragmentation reduce the viability of populations and can leave amphibians more vulnerable to other synergistic environmental stressors such as climate change, pollution and emerging wildlife diseases (Cushman 2005, Laurence and Useche 2009). (froglife.org)
  • the second item: a report on the recent USGS survey of US amphibian populations. (planetsave.com)
  • US frog, toad and salamander populations are declining at a rate of 3.7 percent per year, according to the recent completed USGS Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative. (planetsave.com)
  • However, it is said that amphibian populations have been declining all over the world. (wikipedia.org)
  • Populations of the two-foot-long amphibians are declining across North America. (the-scientist.com)
  • Scientists have calculated that amphibian populations are decreasing at an annual rate of 3.79 percent in the U.S. alone. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • There are many reasons why amphibian populations are declining, many of which are human-related. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • This booth will detail how scientists and volunteers monitor amphibian populations. (mpm.edu)
  • The USGS Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative, or ARMI, is just that, an army of scientists trying to understand and help managers slow or stop amphibian population decline. (usgs.gov)
  • In the last several decades, these endangered animals have attracted attention-deservedly so-but what about the smaller, less conspicuous amphibians that are on the brink of extinction? (msstate.edu)
  • With more than 40% of amphibians threatened with extinction, Vance and Kouba began their journey more than 20 years ago to find solutions to preserve the amphibian genomic tree of life and ensure no U.S. species would be forever lost. (msstate.edu)
  • This award from IMLS will not only safeguard against extinction and help manage our living collections, but the biobank will preserve amphibian ecological and biological information and may advance science in ways we don't anticipate," said Kouba. (msstate.edu)
  • Amphibian surveys in the Andes are important, as ongoing deforestation and other issues have placed 57 percent of amphibian species in Ecuador under threat of extinction. (explorersweb.com)
  • Forty-one percent of the assessed amphibians are threatened with extinction in the immediate and long-term, Luedtke said. (wglt.org)
  • Scientists at the Smithsonian Institution and partners have published a paper that will help them save Panamanian frog species from extinction due to a deadly fungal disease called Chytridiomycosis (chytrid). (amphibianrescue.org)
  • The study, which was published Jan. 4 in Animal Conservation , draws on the expertise of amphibian biologists and scientists the Panama Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project to mathematically determine which frog species have the best probability of escaping extinction with the rescue project's help. (amphibianrescue.org)
  • Globally, the pathogen led to the extinction of at least 90 amphibian species, and to the decline of at least 500 additional species. (news-medical.net)
  • Amphibians worldwide are currently undergoing an extinction crisis. (mongabay.com)
  • Currently experts estimate that 30 percent of the world's amphibians are threatened with extinction, and that well over a hundred species have vanished in the last three decades alone. (mongabay.com)
  • 07/19/2010) With advanced genetic techniques, researchers have drawn a picture of just how devastating the currently extinction crisis for the world's amphibians has become in a new study published in the Proceedings of the Nation Academy of Sciences (PNAS). (mongabay.com)
  • In 2004, about a third of amphibian species were threatened by extinction. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • Nineteen years later, a second global assessment of the world's amphibians has been completed. (wglt.org)
  • Although mass die-offs of amphibians have been happening since the 1980s, we only discovered that a fungus was to blame in 1999. (newscientist.com)
  • Even if there were no killer fungus running amok, amphibians would be in trouble. (newscientist.com)
  • Another study found that more than a quarter of amphibians in Japanese pet stores ( pdf ) may be carrying the fungus. (scientificamerican.com)
  • This amphibian chytrid fungus continued its path eastward across Panama through the 2000s. (news-medical.net)
  • The fungus was known to infect and potentially kill both the other major groups of amphibians, but we did not know if it definitively could infect caecilians in the wild, and whether it could potentially also kill them. (planetsave.com)
  • In fact, a deadly fungus called chytridiomycosis, commonly known as amphibian chytrid, is killing thousands of amphibians across the globe by doing just that. (si.edu)
  • Since the mid-1900s, there has been a pandemic of the infectious chytrid fungus in over 700 amphibian species. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • Scientists are still exploring efficient ways to slow the spread of this lethal fungus. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • Two of these diseases are amphibian chytridiomycosis caused by the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) and a viral disease caused by different ranaviruses (Rv). (researchgate.net)
  • Asia (So Far) Has Been Spared From the Deadly Global Amphibian Fungus: Why? (audubon.org)
  • In the UK it is estimated that 20 tonnes of common toads ( Bufo bufo ) are killed annually as they migrate across roads to reach their breeding ponds, with up to 13,000 annual mortalities being recorded even at manned amphibian crossings. (froglife.org)
  • He helps educate his classmates, some of whom are afraid of amphibians, by taking newts or tadpoles to school when he has to do a presentation. (amphibianark.org)
  • Several months ago Amadeus wrote to us saying that he wanted to donate his pocket money (a considerable sum) to help amphibians. (amphibianark.org)
  • By studying the DNA of the tiny, microscopic creatures that live in amphibian slime, we can find out more about how they help amphibians survive, live, and breathe. (si.edu)
  • Here we report the findings of the second Global Amphibian Assessment, evaluating 8,011 species for the Inter. (researchgate.net)
  • More than 50 percent of amphibian species become locally extinct within six months of Bd's arrival in an area. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Temperate amphibians such as the common toad have experienced significant and continuous declines. (froglife.org)
  • herpesviruses, reptarenavi- chronous amphibian declines ( 7 ). (cdc.gov)
  • This survey represents the first time that US amphibian declines have actually been measured. (planetsave.com)
  • Emerging infectious diseases are a major cause of amphibian declines worldwide. (researchgate.net)
  • 2022) Amphibian Collapses Increased Malaria Incidence in Central America. (news-medical.net)
  • The find helps fill a massive gap of roughly 90 million years in the historical record of caecilians where no fossils had been previously found, baffling scientists. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Modern caecilians are limbless amphibians with cylindrical bodies with a compact, bullet-shaped skull that helps them burrow underground. (scitechdaily.com)
  • In a global survey of caecilians conducted by the Natural History Museum and the Zoological Society of London, England, scientists captured more than 200 caecilian specimens comprising 29 species. (planetsave.com)
  • The Panama Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project is a project partnership between the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo , the Houston Zoo , Zoo New England and Smithsonian Institution. (amphibianrescue.org)
  • Community volunteers help collect scientific data by observing amphibians in local conservation wetland areas. (zoo.org)
  • We are empowering YOU to become a community scientist while learning more about local bat species and bat conservation issues. (zoo.org)
  • Amphibians have complex, biphasic life histories which makes their conservation challenging. (froglife.org)
  • Focus on the Future is a series that seeks to highlight the early career scientists who conduct research at the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. (si.edu)
  • But there are also, of course, many hundreds of community groups and people who are helping to support amphibian conservation in many ways, and their contributions are incredibly valued. (amphibianark.org)
  • Amadeus lives in the South of Germany, and is he an amphibian conservation hero. (amphibianark.org)
  • The Amphibian Ark salutes Amadeus as a young amphibian conservation hero. (amphibianark.org)
  • Between 2014 to 2016, the scientists involved in this massive endeavour re-examined and updated the taxonomy, distribution, abundance, and conservation status of all species of giant clams. (sciencedaily.com)
  • which makes it the ideal subject of side projects for academics, conservation managers, or citizen scientists. (ucpress.edu)
  • As a scientist and intern at the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute's Center for Conservation Genomics , my focus is on slime-specifically amphibian slime, and the creatures within. (si.edu)
  • These results have contributed to effective conservation and enabled genetic management of ex-situ conservation activities of these endangered amphibians. (nii.ac.jp)
  • Given the high evolutionary conservation of gene expression and segmentation patterning between mammalian and amphibian nephrons, the Xenopus laevis pronephric kidney offers a simplified model for studying nephrogenesis. (bvsalud.org)
  • Because of abstracts were submitted and presentations deliv- their biphasic life cycle, amphibians also are consid- ered on amphibian pathogens (84%) than on reptile ered excellent bioindicators for terrestrial and aquatic pathogens (16%), which might reflect current fund- ecosystem health at a time when the degradation of ing biases. (cdc.gov)
  • So, if we want to save amphibians, we're going to need slime. (si.edu)
  • Everyone can play a part in helping amphibians, from keeping pets indoors, to reducing fertilizer and pesticide usage, and covering your pool when not in use (to save amphibians from falling in). (thebradentontimes.com)
  • Hyloscirtus tolkieni' is a new species of frog discovered by appropriately nerdy scientists in Ecuador. (explorersweb.com)
  • When scientists surveying a stream in Rio Negro-Sopladora National Park, Ecuador discovered a new species of frog, they promptly named it after British fantasy author J.R.R. Tolkien. (explorersweb.com)
  • For each of Panama's 214 known frog species, the paper's authors asked amphibian experts to determine the probability that: 1) the rescue project could locate an adequate founding population (20 males and 20 females), 2) the rescue project could successfully breed the species and 3) without the rescue project's help, the species would go extinct. (amphibianrescue.org)
  • Seventy-two amphibian species are found in the American state of Texas, including forty-four species of frog and twenty-eight species of salamander. (wikipedia.org)
  • This frog species is sort of like the Typhoid Mary of amphibians,' Kirksey says. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Amadeus: "At the age of three I started my interests in amphibians when I watched the metamorphosis of a green frog in our garden pond. (amphibianark.org)
  • Powerful new remedies for the flu could be created using a molecule found in frog slime after scientists discovered it destroys the virus. (independent.co.uk)
  • Of all the amphibians sampled, this Philippino frog had the highest infection rate. (audubon.org)
  • Maybe people don't care about amphibians, but imagine if this kind of pathogen had gotten into mammals," says Vance Vredenburg, an ecologist at San Francisco State University. (newscientist.com)
  • According to secular scientists, this strange creature is one of the oldest mammals, supposedly splitting off from the line that gave rise to marsupials (kangaroos, koalas, opossums, etc.) and the eutherians (mice, monkeys, man, etc.) around 166 million years ago. (creation.com)
  • The McGill University paleontologist, who died from COVID-19, was known for using multidisciplinary methods to explore the origins of amphibians, birds, and mammals. (the-scientist.com)
  • 2. RELEVANCE TO PUBLIC HEALTH terrestrial species, although it has been detected in mammals, amphibians, fish, and insects near a site of known contamination. (cdc.gov)
  • Whether it's the spots on their backs or the slime on their skin, more amphibians glow in the dark than researchers realized. (discovermagazine.com)
  • So do at least 31 other amphibian species - something researchers didn't know until a herpetologist and ichthyologist decided to literally shine a special light on them and watched as skin, mucus, bones and more lit up in green and orange. (discovermagazine.com)
  • To find out, the researchers combined their knowledge of amphibian ecology, newly digitized public health record data, and data analysis methods developed by economists to leverage this natural experiment. (news-medical.net)
  • Arguably the most known of the lost amphibians researchers are seeking. (mongabay.com)
  • Over 25 researchers hailing from institutes ranging from the U.S. to Laos to Switzerland combined efforts to shed light in the Asian amphibian mystery. (audubon.org)
  • A study published in the journal Nature found that the status of amphibians globally is "deteriorating rapidly," earning them the unenviable title of being the planet's most threatened class of vertebrates. (wglt.org)
  • Discovered or not, the study found that the status of amphibians globally is "deteriorating rapidly," earning them the unenviable title of being the planet's most threatened class of vertebrates. (wglt.org)
  • These are adaptations to life on land: amphibia were the first vertebrates to have these features. (wikipedia.org)
  • In some ecosystems, the amphibian population is greater than all other vertebrate animal species present. (si.edu)
  • Certainly, the disappearance of amphibians will have serious repercussions throughout a wide range of ecosystems. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • Amphibia are found everywhere in the world, except Antarctica , and there are about 5,565 different species: 88% of them are in the Anura . (wikipedia.org)
  • Journal Article] Development and characterization of 14 microsatellite markers for Buergeria japonica (Amphibia, Anura, Rhacophoridae). (nii.ac.jp)
  • As colleagues at the same university, Lamb and Davis got to talking about whether anyone had checked to see if other amphibians - including species with which biologists work regularly - also glow. (discovermagazine.com)
  • The highest concentration of salamander diversity in the world is in the southeastern U.S. - the Southern Appalachia - where Apodaca, the executive director of the Amphibian and Reptile Conservancy, works and lives. (wglt.org)
  • The conference show- essary to address current and future threats to reptile cased knowledge on numerous reptile and amphibian and amphibian biodiversity. (cdc.gov)
  • For ex- ious pathogens discussed, other important reptile ample, cases of malaria increased in many regions and amphibian pathogens, including Mycoplasma of Central America in the years directly after asyn- spp. (cdc.gov)
  • Have you ever wondered what the difference between a reptile and amphibian is? (si.edu)
  • These amphibians live at the Reptile Discovery Center and Amazonia . (si.edu)
  • The fungal disease - called chytridiomycosis - primarily infects the skin of amphibians, blocking the absorption of oxygen (which is how most Amphibia get their oxygen) and water and probably interfering with other critical, cellular functions. (planetsave.com)
  • While amphibians struggle to survive against habitat loss, climate change, pollution, and overexploitation, they are also being wiped out by a fungal disease known as chytridiomycosis. (mongabay.com)
  • Each year our Amphibian Monitoring volunteers log hundreds of observations of amphibians across western Washington in the iNaturalist online collection of biodiversity observations. (zoo.org)
  • It's a 24-hour celebration of biodiversity where scientists work together to see how many species of plants and animals they can find in one area. (mpm.edu)
  • If we could understand more about amphibians' microbiomes, it might be the key to saving species from threats like chytrid. (si.edu)
  • The varying geography of Texas, the second-largest state, provides a variety of habitats for amphibians, including swamps and the Piney Woods in the east, rocky hills and limestone karst in the central Hill Country of the Edwards Plateau, desert in the south and west, mountains in the far west (the Trans-Pecos), and grassland prairie in the north, also known as the Panhandle. (wikipedia.org)
  • Urban fragmentation is known to decrease species diversity and abundance and coupled with wider habitat degradation such as edge effects and loss of breeding habitats, can make cities particularly challenging for amphibians (Bickford et al. (froglife.org)
  • Nonin- example, amphibians are a model for organogenesis fectious diseases also were not included in presen- research because many can regenerate their limbs and tations but are increasing in importance because for bioprospecting because they produce chemicals habitats and environments are affected by anthro- that have antimicrobial effects (e.g., inactivating HIV) pogenic changes, such as pollution. (cdc.gov)
  • At that rate, nearly one half of these amphibians will have disappeared from their native habitats 20 years out. (planetsave.com)
  • Scientists identify best practices for reintroduction of endangered and extinct amphibians in a new publication. (si.edu)
  • However, anything that messes with this slime, messes with the ability of an amphibian to breathe. (si.edu)
  • Because my colleagues and I work at a zoo with a large amphibian collection, we have access to a unique collection of slime-hundreds of amphibian species representing 250 million years of evolution are at our disposal. (si.edu)
  • They then released the amphibians back into the wild and studied the chemicals in their slime. (independent.co.uk)
  • Amphibians lay their eggs in water, usually in a foam nest . (wikipedia.org)
  • Many amphibians lay eggs in water, and toxins like road salts, pesticides, fertilizers, industrial wastes and plastics can penetrate the eggs' membranes and poison the developing larvae. (thebradentontimes.com)
  • The assessment, published in the journal Nature Wednesday, looked at two decades worth of data from more than 1,000 scientists across the world. (wglt.org)
  • At the spike's peak, up to 1 person per 1,000 annually contracted malaria that normally would not have had the amphibian die-off not occurred, the study found. (news-medical.net)
  • Typical levels of tree canopy loss increase annual malaria cases by up to 0.12 cases per 1,000 people, compared to 1 in 1,000 for the amphibian die-off. (news-medical.net)
  • Much of the natural environment in Asia seems conducive for Bd, so why has the continent so far been spared from the amphibian plague? (audubon.org)
  • The fellowship of scientists discovered the new species, dubbed Hyloscirtus tolkien i, during fieldwork on the eastern slope of the Andes in 2020. (explorersweb.com)
  • The Institute of Museum and Library Services awarded the MSU-led team a National Leadership Grant of $749,000 to support the collection's care and management of reproductive materials from high-priority amphibian species. (msstate.edu)
  • Dustin Smith, curator at the North Carolina Zoo, added, "The biobank and the associated reproductive technologies give us more tools in our toolbox for conserving threatened amphibians. (msstate.edu)
  • Female snakes have clitorises, scientists have detailed for the first time in a study of the animal's sex organs. (motherjones.com)
  • Amphibians have been facing a "quadruple threat" for many years now - a combination of chytrid infections, climate change, pollution and habitat destruction. (planetsave.com)
  • The research team acknowledges that much more data are needed in order to fully assess and understand the Bd threat to amphibians in the Far East. (audubon.org)
  • Roads which bisect migratory routes severely restrict the dispersal of amphibians between their breeding areas and terrestrial habitat. (froglife.org)
  • This study took into account the differences in opinions among amphibian experts in Panama and found consensus in a systematic away. (amphibianrescue.org)
  • The study, published in the journal Environmental Research Letters, links an amphibian die-off in Costa Rica and Panama with a spike in malaria cases in the region. (news-medical.net)
  • Shortly after the mass die-off of amphibians in Costa Rica and Panama, both countries experienced a spike in malaria cases. (news-medical.net)
  • The scientists hope their discovery will lead to the development of new drugs to stop outbreaks of influenza, which is highly contagious and can be deadly, especially for the elderly and very young. (independent.co.uk)
  • A major study recently published in New Scientist found that "scientists may have hugely underestimated the extent of global warming because temperature readings from southern hemisphere seas were inaccurate," and said that ACD is "worse than we thought" because it is happening "faster than we realized. (truthout.org)
  • The scientists note that while they cannot fully rule out another confounding factor, they found no evidence of other variables that could both drive malaria and follow the same pattern of die-offs. (news-medical.net)
  • The new findings, published in the journal Scientific Reports , show that biofluorescence, or the ability to absorb light and reemit it, is more widespread in amphibians than experts previously realized. (discovermagazine.com)
  • Two early examples include the petition to the President of the United States in July 1945 from 70 scientists at the Manhattan Project calling on Truman to refrain from deploying the newly created atomic bomb, and the famous Russell-Einstein Manifesto , which called on world governments to banish war as a way to settle disputes because of the risks of global annihilation from nuclear weapons. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Scientists in the MSU Forest and Wildlife Research Center and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station are leading a consortium of partners to advance the establishment and implementation of a National Amphibian Genome Bank. (msstate.edu)
  • The scientists, all of whom are women, say previous research had mistaken the organs as scent glands or underdeveloped versions of penises, in a study that criticized the comparatively limited research into female sex organs. (motherjones.com)
  • Scientists say research of the snake's biology is important in understanding how to stop the python's spread - not just in the Everglades, but also in the state and around the world. (wtvr.com)
  • Beyond serving as an important food source for larger animals, amphibians act as nature's pest control by eating all sorts of insects (including ones that are harmful to humans, like mosquitoes). (si.edu)
  • Early efforts of pioneers like Carl Sagan paved the way for more recent efforts, but they depended on scientists willing to put themselves forward as communicators and popularizers. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The Amphibian Ark truly appreciates the amazing efforts of the Tremont Elementary School students and teachers. (amphibianark.org)
  • The more we learn, the better we can protect the vanishing wetlands of Washington and their amphibian inhabitants. (zoo.org)
  • For tens of millions of years, during the Carboniferous and early Permian , amphibia were top predators on land, especially in the low-lying tropical river systems. (wikipedia.org)
  • Alternatively, many other amphibia have toxic skin, which is harmful to predators. (wikipedia.org)
  • These are amphibian species that have not been seen for years-in some cases even up to a century-but may still survive in the wild. (mongabay.com)
  • It is good that even the more conservative scientists have come aboard the reality train, because a recent National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-led (NOAA) study published by the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society has provided yet more evidence linking ACD with extreme heat events. (truthout.org)
  • Yet the amphibian decline had direct health consequences for people, according to a study from the University of California, Davis. (news-medical.net)
  • A comprehensive study on the status of giant clams worldwide has now been published by an international team of marine scientists. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Joshy Jacob, a scientist at Emory University in Atlanta, who led the study, said they managed to isolate a small structure called a peptide that kills the flu virus but leaves healthy tissue intact. (independent.co.uk)
  • In this study, we developed microsatellite markers for nine endangered amphibian species endemic to Ryukyu Islands in Japan. (nii.ac.jp)