Posts Tagged ‘Amphibians’

12 Days of Grub: Day 5 – Five Golden Frogs

Posted by in Amphibians,Gift of Grub,Holidays

On the Fifth Day of Grub, your zoo gift will help to feed…Five Golden Frogs (these endangered amphibians are WAY more priceless than golden rings), Four Calling Birds, Three Wild Dogs, Two Grizzly Bears, and Darwin the Cassowary! CLICK HERE to read them all!

The Golden frog, Atelopus zeteki, is a species as important to the people of Panama as the Bald eagle is to citizens of the United States.  Their cultural significance dates back to Mayan times, and even today they are considered to be symbols of good fortune.  In Panama, the Golden frog (also known as the Rana dorada) has become a national symbol of nature.  Golden frogs are still used as advertisements for restaurants and hotels, and even appear on lottery tickets. You can also find some of those great Golden frogs here at The Houston Zoo!

Golden frogs are small frogs that range in background color from brilliant gold to greenish yellow with highly variable black markings.  They are endemic to cloud forests with clear running streams and prefer cooler temperatures.  Females are larger than males.  Wild frogs have a unique skin toxin, zetekitoxin, which is used for defense much as in other poison dart frog species.  The basis for this toxin comes from the food they eat in the wild; captive animals lose their toxicity.

Unfortunately, very few Panamanians have ever seen a wild Golden frog.  Habitat destruction, agrochemicals, and over-collection for the pet trade have all played a part in the decline of the Golden frog population.  The worst threat, however, has been the appearance of a recent fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (also known as “chytrid”) which is highly contagious and fatal to both adult and larval Golden frog.  In response to these threats, the Houston Zoo has joined a conservation initiative called Project Golden Frog along with a group of other zoos and scientific organizations whose primary goal is to preserve this species.

The Golden frog diet in the wild consists of a wide variety of different species of arthropods.  In captivity adults receive primarily two week old crickets that have been fed a highly fortified diet and are dusted with vitamin and calcium powder.  They are also given flightless fruit flies and occasional silkworms and small hornworms.  Newly metamorphosed frogs receive fruit flies, day old crickets and small arthropods known as springtails.

Maintaining not only the Golden frog, but also the other amphibians at the Houston Zoo is a challenging task.  These animals eat a lot of insects! Did you know that the Houston Zoo feeds over 18,000,000 (no, I did not make an error in the number of zeros) crickets per year to the animals in our collection?  The zoo amphibian species consume a significant part of this number.

Written by Stan Mays, Herpetology

 

Help provide tasty and nutritious grub for the Zoo’s Golden Frogs and the rest of our animal family this holiday season: Give the Gift of Grub!  TXU Energy is matching all donations through December 31, up to $25,000 total, so your gift could have TWICE the impact.  Don’t miss out on this truly GOLDEN opportunity.

It’s Time to have a TOADally Awesome Fathers Day!

Posted by in Amphibians,Animal Info,Events

Just say NO to tacky ties!

Fathers Day is creeping up, and now that you’ve learned some about the Dads residing at the Houston Zoo, it’s time to finally pin down the perfect plan for that special dad in your life. As always, we are looking out for you and know not only the perfect gift, but the perfect way to celebrate too.

You’ve probably gotten dad a striped tie or two, some tools and lawn equipment (how fun for him!) and a lunch at The Olive Garden, but this year you need to break out of the box and get creative. The answer? Name a Houston Toad after him!

Houston Toads are a critically endangered species that, once native to Houston, now reside only in a small portion of Texas west of our city. The Houston Zoo’s conservation department has developed a Houston Toad program with hopes to increase their dwindling population and boost their likelihood of survival in the wild.

When you name a toad after dad, you’re helping support our Houston Toads, plus you’re giving one of the lucky toads a really cool name. Click here for more on the Houston Toad and the Name-A-Toad program.

Now that you’ve got the gift down, we have the perfect way to spend Fathers Day – our TOAD-ally Awesome Fathers Day event taking place on Sunday, June 19 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. at the Reflection Pool. You’ll have a chance to introduce dad to one of those special Houston Toads, and you can partake in some TOADally awesome crafts and activities – all FREE with your Zoo admission!

The Houston Toad - Some names we've gotten so far include Sticky, Lord Mittens, Mongo and Mr.Chuckluck!

Can’t get enough toads in your life? Join us for special Toad Tracker Wild Winks taking place June 30, July 21 and August 13. These are one-of-a-kind overnight experiences where you will get to track toads on the Houston Zoo grounds at night. It could even be a good bonding experience with dad! :)  Click here for more details.

Toad trackers measuring a Houston Zoo inhabitant

It’s Not Easy Being A Green Dad

Posted by in Amphibians,Endangered,Holidays

When you are small, moist and squishy amphibian, you make a very tasty snack for most mammals, birds, fish and reptiles. In fact, you are kind of like a green (or other colored) oreo cookie! You are very popular in the pond, and not in a good way. You most likely spend the majority of your time not making friends, but being quite anti-social, hiding under logs, leaves, and high up in the trees trying to avoid being someone else’s lunch.

As you might imagine, this makes things especially difficult when parenting comes in to question. Can you imagine if, while attempting to change your child’s diaper or tying their shoes, or teaching them how to throw a baseball you had to constantly be looking over your shoulder or warding off predators, without a weapon, claws, beak, hooves, horns or sharp teeth? It would make things pretty dang stressful and tiring, that’s for sure! And, because of other creatures “sweet tooth” for you, there is a good chance you would be sitting in a stomach basking in gastric juices before you were able to raise your offspring successfully.

For this reason, and others, you do not usually see a lot of parental care in the amphibious creatures. Most amphibians may be absent parents once the deed is done, but they have good reason, and they have adopted a reproductive strategy that works better for their kind.

Glass frog dads guard their fragile eggs

What’s the strategy you ask? Lots, lots, lots and lots, of eggs! By laying hundreds, if not thousands of eggs, there is the hope that a small percentage will make it to adulthood and eventually make more frogs or toads.

This is very different in the mammal and bird world where you see parental care as the major reproductive strategy, having less offspring at a time.

And- if you do have more than 2 or 3 offspring, you generally have aunties, uncles and grandparents to help with the rearing. Why else are we so engrossed by those national stories of those human parents who have 4, 6, 8 babies at a time?! We are amazed and question, how do they do it? The truth is these people must rely on family, good friends and corporate sponsors to make it work! Frogs do not have this luxury!

HOWEVER and quite amazingly, if you look close enough, there are several examples of frog dads out their that do protect their young, proving once again that amphibians (frogs, toads, salamanders and caecilians) are one of the most surprising and diverse groups of vertebrates on this planet.

Although there are quite a few examples of good frog mommies, the majority are generally the males exhibiting parental care. This is because female frogs use up a profound amount of energy producing and carrying around all of those hundreds and thousands of eggs and don’t have much to give once the eggs are deposited. Babies mamma is usually way too tired, ready to prop her feet up, maybe get a massage, and eat a nice fly quiche.

So, in honor of Fathers Day, here are just a few examples of Toad-ally Amazing Amphibian Dads:

* Glass frog dads guard their fragile eggs which hang from leaves snapping at any potential intruders and mimicking their clutch of eggs as well.

* The African bullfrog guards his eggs and will aggressively defend the offspring. Once the eggs have hatched, he will dig a channel between the small pools of water the tadpoles started in, and an adjacent stream so the tadpoles may escape their evaporating natal pool!

* Species of the midwife toad actually carry eggs on their back legs until they are ready to hatch. The male will then transport them to water and let them go!

Poison dart frog

* Poison dart frogs will let little tadpoles take a ride on their back, moving them around to a nursery bromeliad plant filled with still water. Some will even transport them to nearby streams.

* Some African rain frog species will protect their eggs which have been laid in burrows in the ground.

* Gladiator frogs defend their stream side nursery pools and bust out with arm spears projecting from their bodies to aggressively defend their young from other frogs and/or sneaky cockroaches!

* Darwin frogs brood their tadpoles in their vocal sacs until they are ready to complete metamorphosis. Now that’s commitment!

Let’s hear it for the dads! Celebrate Dad by giving him a memorable Father’s Day gift this year – Name a Houston Toad after him! With your gift, you help us support Houston Toads, a critically endangered species native to Texas. Click here to learn more about Houston Toads and how you can further the Houston Zoo’s conservation efforts that help ensure their survival.

The ciritically endangered Houston Toad

Come to TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day on June 19! Come visit the newly-named toads on June 19 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. as we celebrate a TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day at the Houston Zoo. This fun, family event will be filled with crafts, activities, Houston Toad info and much more! This event is FREE with your paid Zoo admission.

Texas Roadtrip

Posted by in Amphibians,Animal Info,Children's Zoo,Featured,Just for Kids,Mammals

Spotlight on Texas

Ever wonder what animals you can find right here in Texas?  Well, look no further!  Most of the animals in the John P. McGovern Children’s Zoo can be found right here in the great state of Texas.  Some are here naturally and some you can find on farms across the state.  Texas has a great diversity of habitat with lots of animals!
As you first walk into the Children’s Zoo, imagine yourself in the city.  You will see a stream of Koi fish that are very colorful additions to many ponds and water gardens.  This is also where you can swap your nature items in our Swap Shop.  Of course where you find a great city, you will find a great forest.  Winding through the boardwalk you will see Deer, Turkey, Owls, Porcupines, Coati, Bald Eagle, and Otters!  As the Otters are enticing you to stop and play you will notice the nice coastal smell wafting your way.  The sounds of the

Coati

shore pull you along the stream to the coast to watch our Pelicans and sea gulls get their afternoon lunch.  Fish are flying through the air and our Pelican, Walter, is trying to woo the female, Mable, by giving her special treats.  Next door, the fresh water Alligator Snapping turtles take you back to prehistoric times when reptiles ruled the earth.  You will watch and wonder, “Just how long can they stay under water?”  If you sit and wait, you might want to bring a book because they can hold their breath up to 50 minutes!  As you wait, you see something pop up out of the corner of your eye.  When you go to look, nothing is there!  Everyone knows that patience is a virtue, so you sit for just a couple minutes and a prairie dog pops his head out to look for predators.  These rodents spend a lot of time burrowing in the ground.  Ever want to just burrow underground yourself?  Well, you can get a fresh perspective by popping your own head in one of the viewing windows.  By this time, it is pretty sunny and you see a nice cool cave.  Through our cave system, you will see some of the reptiles and amphibians that make Texas their home.  As you turn a corner to the second cave, you see a nice starry sky.  As you walk through you notice some fluttering behind glass.  At first you think it’s birds, but it is bats!  These fruit and nectar-feeding bats are our neighbors from Central America but are representing the insect eating bats you can find flying our night sky

prairie dog

right in our backyard.  There is a colony of around 20 million Mexican free-tailed bats in Bracken Cave, near San Antonia, that eat 250 tons of insects every night!  Talk about pest control!  As you wander out of the bat cave, you see a Swift fox.  Don’t let it’s size

white tailed deer and Rio Grande turkey

fool you into thinking it’s a baby.  These are actually fully grown adults.  Next, you see the farm animals.  These are all domesticated animals that many people raise.  These are animals that you can touch!  You may not be able to choose between the silly antics of the goats or reaching over to give our Zebu cattle a nice back rub.  Either way, they have a way of warming your heart.  By this time, you may be tired but the kids are still wild.  Go ahead and relax on a bench while watching your kids have a grand time on the play ground or in the water play area.
WOW!  Texas is big but you can see it all in just a short time right here in your home town.  So next time you talk a walk through the Children’s Zoo imagine yourself taking your own personal road trip through Texas.

On The Eleventh Day Of Christmas

Posted by in Amphibians,Christmas,Holidays

…The Houston Zoo Gave To Me

Eleven Houston Toads Chirping

HoustonToad

Ten Floating Jellies

Nine Ne-Ne Geese Singing

Eight Growing Giraffes

Seven Orangs a’Hangin’

Six Entertaining Elands

Five Elephants Trumpeting

Four Komodos Crawling

Three Leaping Leopards

Two Curious Coatis

And A Toby The Red Panda In A Tree

Stay tuned to our blogs as we count down the 12 Days of Christmas at the Houston Zoo.