Atlanta Botanical Gardens Death of the last Rabb's Fringe-limbed Treefrog

That's a shame, but with his relatively old age I knew it was only a matter of time :(.
 
The Rabbs' Tree Frog Just Went Extinct - Scientific American Blog Network
The world’s last known Rabbs’ fringe-limbed tree frog (Ecnomiohyla rabborum) has died.

Known as “Toughie,” the tiny male frog, originally from Panama, spent the past few years living by himself at Atlanta Botanical Garden. The species has not been observed in the wild since 2007, just two years after it was first discovered by scientists.

Toughie’s death follows four and a half years after another Rabbs’ tree frog died at Zoo Atlanta. That frog was euthanized in 2012 after its health began to decline.

Both of these Rabbs’ tree frogs were collected in Panama while scientists were there investigating the deadly chytrid fungus, which has devastated amphibian populations in that country and around the world.

Although no signs of wild Rabbs’ tree frogs have shown up in the past nine years, at least one scientist still held out hope they might one day be found again. “The habits of this genus can make them extremely difficult to find if they remain high up in the trees,” says Jonathan Kolby, director of the Honduras Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Center. “Being that this species breeds in tree cavities up in the canopy, I would hope that this behavior offers some protection from exposure to chytrid fungus, although the species was reported to have become much less common after the arrival of chytrid in the region.”

Still, the likelihood remains that the Rabbs’ fringe-limbed tree frog is now truly gone. That’s notable, not just for the extinction, but for the circumstances around Toughie’s life. Extinctions, you see, are very rarely witnessed by humans. Instead, they tend to be discovered years or even decades after the last member of a species gave up the fight. The Rabbs’ tree frog was a rare exception. For the past four and a half years, Toughie has been a very public ambassador for his lost species, and for all of the frog species going extinct around the world during the current amphibian extinction crisis. How many thousands of people who walked by his enclosure at Atlanta Botanical Garden felt the pull and gravity of his inevitable extinction? As the organization posted today on Facebook, “He will be missed by Garden staff and visitors alike.”
 
Tragic news, indeed. Kudos to Atlanta Botanic Gardens, Atlanta Zoo, and EVACC for trying.

More generally, and with some exceptions, the zoo community's response to the amphibian crisis really has been pathetic. This is a rare example of a taxon that could benefit hugely from the ex situ approach, and a golden opportunity for zoos to display their conservation relevance. A decade since the Amphibian Ark was launched and over a decade since the Global Amphibian Assessment, however, amphibians are still massively underrepresented in zoos and painfully underfunded in situ. But hey, if it isn't big, furry and popular with the public, WGASA right (monorail reference intended)?
 
"How many thousands of people who walked by his enclosure at Atlanta Botanical Garden felt the pull and gravity of his inevitable extinction? "

Does this mean that he was normally on display? I had been under the impression that he was strictly off-show, at least in recent years.
 
Does this mean that he was normally on display? I had been under the impression that he was strictly off-show, at least in recent years.
yes, he was off-display for years. I think that was journalistic licence.

(I just read a blog earlier this morning from the one of the people who looked after him - they were saying a lot of people ask about him, so they would put new photos on the blog when they could as updates).

EDIT: it was this one from 2013 so may have been on display after that, but I don't think so.
http://frogpodblog.blogspot.co.nz/2013/10/rabbs-fringe-limbed-tree-frog-update.html
 
The worst part for me is that I actually did see the Rabb's fringe-limbed tree frog(s) while at Zoo Atlanta, but I don't remember them (in Atlanta I was more focused on the aquarium) and have no pictures :(.
 
I think this is very sad. As jayjds2 suggests, some very endangered animals may make little impact on people. I remember seeing the only captive individual of Nduk eagle owl, while I was at London Zoo, but the notice didn't indicate how special it was. Similarly, I saw a northern white rhino at London Zoo, but I wasn't aware about how special it was.
 
I remember seeing the only captive individual of Nduk eagle owl, while I was at London Zoo, but the notice didn't indicate how special it was. Similarly, I saw a northern white rhino at London Zoo, but I wasn't aware about how special it was.

Owls do seem to be one of those animals which visitors take for granted :(

Similar to your example, the closely-related Fraser's Eagle Owl was held - as I have noted in my "Species We Have Lost" thread - at collections such as Antwerp and Olmen Balen until as recently as 2012, with other collections holding the species within the last few decades too; yet no one on Zoochat has ever posted a photograph of the species, or even recalled *seeing* them at said collections.

Even this isn't as frustrating as the fact Shelley's Eagle Owl was held at Antwerp for over thirty years until as recently as 1990, given that this is a species known only from a total of 13 or 14 recorded specimens, and even fewer sightings in the wild. To my knowledge, the photograph illustrating this taxon on ZTL - presumably depicting the Antwerp specimen or one of the individuals held at Wassenaar in the 1970's - is the only image of a living Shelley's Eagle Owl in existence; when Owls of the World: A Photographic Guide was published in 2013, the taxon was illustrated only by photographs of a stuffed specimen held at Tring due to the fact the author could not locate any photographs of a living individual, wild or captive.
 
More generally, and with some exceptions, the zoo community's response to the amphibian crisis really has been pathetic. This is a rare example of a taxon that could benefit hugely from the ex situ approach, and a golden opportunity for zoos to display their conservation relevance. A decade since the Amphibian Ark was launched and over a decade since the Global Amphibian Assessment, however, amphibians are still massively underrepresented in zoos and painfully underfunded in situ. But hey, if it isn't big, furry and popular with the public, WGASA right (monorail reference intended)?

How many indiviuals were collected? If only a handfull of specimens
were discovered, how could the zoo community ever saved the species?

I do, though, agree with your statement. Several zoos have done great
work for amphibians and turtles, both of which are going through a crisis
at the moment, but most didn't. It's such a shame. If even half of the
zoos in Europe and the US/Canada would fill just ONE room with vivaria
housing endagered cold-bloods, dozens if not hundreds of species could
be saved! :(
 
How many indiviuals were collected? If only a handfull of specimens
were discovered, how could the zoo community ever saved the species?

If you are referencing Rabb's frogs, I believe only five made it to the US, split between Zoo Atlanta and Atlanta Botanical Gardens. I'm not sure about any holdings outside of the US, though.
 
If even half of the
zoos in Europe and the US/Canada would fill just ONE room with vivaria
housing endagered cold-bloods, dozens if not hundreds of species could
be saved! :(

I agree with you, Mr Zootycoon. An average size zoo could build various small houses for small animals. I would prefer to see several species of amphibians, rather than a new exhibit for meerkats or other 'popular animals that zoo directors expect very visitor to want to see, even though many people have seen them already'. One of my favourite zoo buildings was the rodent house at Berlin Tierpark - basically a garden shed containing small mammals, such as cururos, gundis and dassie rats (yes, it did have an impact on me). So much space is taken up by ABC animals in many zoos, it is a great shame that many zoos ignore small species, even though new exhibits need not be prohibitively expensive. How much would it have cost several zoos to save the Rabb's fringe-limbed treefrog?
 
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