UF scientists identify the potentially invasive Tropical clawed frog

Does the thought of a frog fascinate you or freak you out? What if you imagined one with claws?

University of Florida scientists have confirmed a clawed frog species in the Tampa area, and they don’t know yet whether it might spread to other areas of Florida.

In 2014, a resident of Riverview, just outside Tampa, found nonnative frogs on her property. In response, Jeff Hill, a professor of fisheries and aquatic sciences at the UF/IFAS Tropical Aquaculture Lab (TAL) in nearby Ruskin, surveyed a bunch of ponds near the frogs and identified a breeding sight at a small stormwater runoff pond.

Hill thought the species was the African clawed frog. He even wrote a peer-reviewed paper about it, published in 2017. But new UF/IFAS-led research shows the amphibian he saw was instead the Tropical clawed frog, also known as the Western clawed frog. This marks the first report of this species of frog outside its native range in West Africa.

“The Tropical clawed frog invasion represents yet another disturbance to Florida’s aquatic ecosystems, particularly those in southern Florida, which are already vulnerable due to habitat destruction, pollution, invasive species and disease,” said Christina Romagosa, a UF/IFAS research associate professor of wildlife ecology and conservation.

The new research led by UF/IFAS is published in the Journal of Herpetology. It shows the importance of correctly identifying species — particularly those that are nonnative – for management purposes, said Romagosa.

She and Hill are co-authors on the new study, along with Quenton Tuckett, a research associate professor at TAL. The research was led by Colin Goodman, formerly one of Romagosa’s master’s degree students and now a doctoral student at the University of South Florida. The research was conducted in collaboration with the Florida Museum of Natural History and researchers David Blackburn, Gregory Jongsma and Edward Stanley.

For this study, researchers sampled 43 water bodies but only found frogs from 22 of them in the Tampa Bay area.

Though the African clawed frog and the Tropical clawed frog are both nonnative to Florida, Blackburn and members of his lab correctly identified the novel invasion as the Western clawed Frog through DNA analysis and micro-CT scans.

“These two species look strikingly similar, with a slight difference in body size,” said Blackburn, curator of herpetology at the Florida Museum. “It can be difficult to distinguish them without the help of genetics or CT scans. This is an excellent example of how collaborations between different UF biologists can turn up surprising things.”

As a rule, it takes a lot of money to control nonnative species. They cost the United States about $120 billion a year in damage and control. They cost Florida $45 million a year to manage.

The Tropical clawed frog poses several concerns to scientists. For example, the species itself has spread at the local scale, and may spread throughout Florida, although there’s no evidence of how quickly the frogs will spread. If the species spreads, it may outcompete native frog species for food resources.

This species is also a generalist predator, and while it primarily eats aquatic invertebrates — namely insects — it will often eat other frogs’ eggs or tadpoles.

“We know that the species we initially thought this was — the African clawed frog — has invaded many other areas, including France, Portugal, California, Chile, Italy and China, among others,” said Goodman, who led the research for his master’s thesis in the UF/IFAS College of Agricultural and Life Sciences.

As for the “clawed” part of the frog, they’re sharp but very small, so people need not fret over them, said Goodman.

Instead, the frogs use their claws to shred and break apart larger prey. Additionally, the frogs are almost entirely aquatic, so they only typically come on land to move from one pond to another. This means the chances of a person even encountering one in normal everyday activity is relatively low.

In addition, the Tropical clawed frog may have the potential to spread disease, Goodman said. Many fungal and viral pathogens negatively impact amphibians in the United States.

He emphasized that while it’s important to note the potential concerns with the Tropical clawed frog, the potential for extensive population or disease spread in the current population in the Tampa Bay area is currently unknown. Thus, researchers are not claiming these things are going to happen.

Still, he said, “effective management of an invasion relies on the ability to make accurate predictions about the target species’ spread and impact.”

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The mission of the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is to develop knowledge relevant to agricultural, human and natural resources and to make that knowledge available to sustain and enhance the quality of human life. With more than a dozen research facilities, 67 county Extension offices, and award-winning students and faculty in the UF College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, UF/IFAS brings science-based solutions to the state’s agricultural and natural resources industries, and all Florida residents.

ifas.ufl.edu | @UF_IFAS

 

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Posted: April 8, 2021


Category: UF/IFAS
Tags: African Clawed Frog, Christina Romagosa, Colin Goodman, David Blackburn, Florida Museum Of Natural History, Frogs, Identification, Jeff Hill, Nonnative, Ponds, Prey, Quenton Tuckett, School Of Forest Fisheries And Geomatics Sciences, Tampa Bay, Tropical Aquaculture Laboratory, Tropical Clawed Frog, UF/IFAS Wildlife Ecology And Conservation


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