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Amphibian Conservation Education Project: Bridging the Gap between Citizen Scientists and Bench Scientists What is the Amphibian Crisis? Over 6,000 species of frogs, toads, newts, salamanders & caecilians in the world First comprehensive assessment of amphibian populations conducted in 2004 by IUCN Concluded that 2,000-3,000 are threatened with extinction Why are they disappearing? Habitat loss Pollution Climate change Diseases Invasive species Over collection Chytrid Fugus First detected in an African Clawed Frog, Xenopus laevis in 1938 African Clawed Frogs were transported all over the world for use in human pregnancy testing Fungus attacks the skin and affects amphibians ability to “breathe” through their skin Why should people care? Gastric-Brooding Toad Rheobatrachus silus Act as exterminators Vital role in ecosystem Indicators of environmental health Aid in medical research and the pharmaceutical industry Cultural importance Benefits of Amphibian Conservation Education Project • Aid herpetologists with labor and time intensive surveys • Develop community stewardship through teachers and students • Creates awareness of ecological concerns amphibians face • Develop inquiry skills and apply skills to science Field Work • Participants collect: • Habitat description • Water quality data • GPS coordinates • Pictures of the specimen • Swab samples to test for chytrid Making it relevant Omaha’s Zoo partnered with The Biofinity Project Biofinity was able to quickly configure a user friendly data repository for the Zoo Allows data and pictures to be easily uploaded, stored and visually analyzed Allows students and herpetologists to track where amphibian species and Chytrid fungus are being found throughout the state Amphibian Database “Administrators” are able to verify and edit data Amphibian Database Biofinity created data fields specific to amphibian project Amphibian Database Google Maps allows students and herpetologists to visually analyze data Amphibian Database Students are able to upload pictures of amphibians Allows herpetologists to confirm species sightings Project Future Continue training participants Introduce database to herpetologists and gain feedback Possibly create different querying methods for users Tool to search for amphibians that test positive for Chytrid fungus The Connection Through partnerships, OHDZ will profoundly impact amphibian education OHDZ is creating partnerships with one common goal; to preserve these species so that future generations can “Appreciate the Little Things” Resources www.omahazoo.com biofinity.unl.edu/biofinity/HDZ/amphibian/ www.saveafrog.org www.globalamphibians.org www.amphibians.org www.amphibiaweb.org References IUCN, Conservation International and NatureServe. 2008. An Analysis of Amphibians on the 2008 IUCN Red List <www.iucnredlist.org/amphibians>. Downloaded on 8 September 2010.