Claudia Flores, originaria del pueblo indígena huitoto, lidera los esfuerzos de conservación de la tortuga taricaya (Podocnemis unifilis) en Tres Esquinas, pequeña comunidad de apenas 10 familias en la Amazonía peruana. En cinco años de trabajo han logrado liberar alrededor de 5500 crías de tortuga taricaya en el río Putumayo. Leer más.





Científicos de Ilia State University, en Georgia, verificaron con ADN de muestras de tejidos, la existencia de una cuarta especie de anaconda 20 años después de ser descrita a partir de características morfológicas. Leer más.
La 19 Conferencia Mundial sobre Vida Silvestre (CoP19 CITES) que se celebra en Panamá aprobó por consenso que se controle estrictamente el comercio de todas las especies de rana cristal, una medida tildada por los activistas como una «acción decisiva» para frenar el rápido crecimiento de la comercialización mundial de mascotas exóticas. Leer más
.
Luego de ocho años de trabajo, la Universidad del Magdalena con apoyo de científicos de otras universidades de Colombia y Brasil, descubrieron una nueva especie de rana en la Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. Leer más.
Caballero-Díaz, C., Sánchez-Montes, G., Gómez, I., Díaz-Zúñiga, A., & Martínez-Solano, Í. (2022). Artificialwater bodies as amphibian breeding sites: the case of the common midwife toad (Alytes obstetricans) in central Spain, Amphibia-Reptilia (published online ahead of print 2022). doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/15685381-bja10115
Natural breeding sites for amphibians are decreasing in quantity and quality in temperate regions, resulting in local extinctions and increasing population fragmentation. Artificial water bodies (e.g., water tanks or cattle troughs) can represent suitable reproductive habitats for some amphibians, but demographic data are required to assess this assumption. We evaluated the role of artificial water bodies in the persistence of a species of population concern, the common midwife toad, Alytes obstetricans (Laurenti, 1768), at local and regional scales. We surveyed 275 water bodies to characterize the distribution of the species and detected 63 breeding populations of A. obstetricans where we estimated larval abundance. In addition, we monitored two populations for three consecutive breeding seasons using capture-mark-recapture methods based on photo-identification, assessing abundance, breeding success and the use of space of adult individuals captured on multiple occasions. Our results show that artificial sites are preferentially used as breeding sites in the region compared to natural aquatic habitats, providing key habitat for the species and hosting much larger numbers and densities of larvae than natural sites. At local scale, populations of A. obstetricans in artificial sites were abundant and characterized by high male breeding success. However, adults are spatially aggregated around breeding sites, with small home ranges, implying high vulnerability to population fragmentation. Our results suggest artificial breeding sites can sustain viable populations of A. obstetricans, provided measures promoting connectivity among breeding nuclei are considered.