WCS Bronx Zoo and partners take important reintroduction step in 12-year effort
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NEW YORK – Dec. 11, 2012 – The Wildlife Conservation Society’s Bronx Zoo, the Toledo Zoo, Tanzanian government, World Bank and other partners have reintroduced 2,000 Kihansi spray toads into the Kihansi Gorge in Tanzania. This is the first example of an amphibian species that had been declared extinct in the wild being reintroduced into its native habitat.
The repatriation effort marks a major milestone for a species declared extinct in the wild in 2009. It is the result of a 12-year partnership to breed the toads in captivity while its habitat was restored.
“The WCS Bronx Zoo has been working with our partners for more than a decade to save the Kihansi spray toad with the ultimate goal of reintroducing it back into the wild,” said Jim Breheny, Executive Vice President and General Director of WCS Zoos & Aquarium and Director of the Bronx Zoo. “The curators in the Bronx Zoo and in the Toledo Zoo – whose expertise allowed them to develop a successful husbandry and propagation program for these unique little toads – have helped to ensure the reintroduction of an important living component back into the Tanzanian ecosystem.”
The toad was last seen in the wild in 2005, and in 2009, it was declared extinct in the wild by the IUCN. Although the ultimate cause for extinction is still debated, it is likely a combination of habitat change and the emergence of chytrid fungus, a virulent pathogen which is responsible for alarming population crashes and extinctions of amphibian species across the world.
The Bronx Zoo sent Don Boyer, Curator of Herpetology, and Alyssa Borek, Herpetology Keeper, to participate in the reintroduction of the toads in the gorge.
The Bronx and the Toledo zoos will continue to maintain an assurance population of the spray toads and have them on exhibit for visitors to see. The released toads and habitat will be closely monitored to ensure that environmental conditions remain favorable and to evaluate the progress of the animals. Additional releases may occur periodically to bolster the number of toads with the hope of having a viable, self-sustaining population.
Max Pulsinelli – 718-220-5182 – mpulsinelli@wcs.org
Steve Sautner – 718-220-3682 – ssautner@wcs.org
Steve Fairchild – 718-220-5189 – sfairchild@wcs.org
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