Australia museum, IBM launch frog-count app for a deep
dive into pond population
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[November 10, 2017]
By Will Ziebell
SYDNEY (Reuters) - An Australian museum has
teamed up with computer giant International Business Machines Corp to
count the country's native frog population, and they want amphibian
enthusiasts to jump on board.
The Australian Museum and IBM say they developed the world's first
smartphone app especially designed to let users record and report frog
calls, croaks and chirps - without disturbing them.
Australia has 240 named native species of frog, and the museum wants to
use its FrogID app to identify what it believes are dozens more still
ribbiting under the radar.
"One of the cool things about this is you can survey frogs just by
listening," said Jodi Rowley, the museum's curator of amphibian and
reptile conservation biology.
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"It's actually a lot more accurate than photos, and photos encourage
people to handle or disturb frogs," Rowley added. She noted that every
frog species has a unique call.
While frog populations are in decline around the world, Australia's
frogs are especially vulnerable because of a combination of climate
change, pollution, introduced species and urban development, the
country's Department of Environment and Energy says.
According to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation
Act four frog varieties are extinct, five are critically endangered, 14
are endangered and a further 10 are considered vulnerable.
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An Australian Green Tree frog named "Godzilla" sits on the hand of
Kathy Potter of the Frog and Toad Study Group during the launch of
the Australian Museum's national frog count phone app called "FrogID"
in Sydney, Australia, November 10, 2017. REUTERS/David Gray
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Scientists say the presence of frogs in an ecosystem is a sign of good
environmental health, but the small amphibians are highly sensitive to changes
in their habitat.
Rowley said she hopes campers, hikers and other serious nature lovers will help
with the research, but she noted that even the humble backyard fishpond could
provide valuable data.
"It might allow us to figure out which areas of suburbia are really good for
frogs, why they are good and hopefully help create more frog friendly habitats
in suburbia," she said.
Rowley said amateurs who record previously unknown frog calls may even help
discover a new type of frog or determine if any introduced species have gone
unnoticed.
"All these things will help us – and help Australia – make sure that frogs don't
croak," she said.
(Editing by Byron Kaye and Michael Perry)
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