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California Red-legged Frog

 
Wikipedia: California Red-legged Frog
California Red-legged Frog
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Ranidae
Genus: Rana
Species: R. draytonii
Binomial name
Rana draytonii
Baird & Girard, 1852
Synonyms

Rana aurora draytonii Baird & Girard, 1852

The California Red-legged Frog is a moderate to large (4.4-14 cm) species of frog. It is nowadays known under the scientific name Rana draytonii, after being long included with the Northern Red-legged Frog (R. aurora) as subspecies of a single species called simply Red-legged Frog. California red-legged frogs are nearly endemic to California, only leaving the State as they enter extreme northern Baja California. This species occurs most commonly along the Northern and Southern Coast Ranges, and in isolated areas in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.

Its back is brown, grey, ,olive or reddish color with black flecks and dark, irregular, light-centered blotches and is coarsely granular. There is a dark mask with a whitish border above the upper jaw, and black and red or yellow mottling in the groin. The lower abdomen and the underside of its hindlegs are normally red. Males can be recognized by their enlarged forelimbs, thumbs, and webbing. Juveniles have more pronounced dorsal spotting, and may have yellow, instead of red markings on the underside of the hindlegs. A characteristic feature of the red-legged frog is its dorsolateral fold, which is visible on both sides of the frog extending roughly from the eye to the "hip." The California red-legged frog was listed as a threatened species by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service in 1996.

Contents

Ecology and behavior

It is estimated that this species has disappeared from 70% of its range and is now only found in about 238 streams or drainages in 23 counties of California. Breeding occurs from November to March (breeding has been recorded earlier in the southern limits of its range). This species inhabits dense, shrubby or emergent riparian vegetation and still or slow-moving perennial and ephemeral water bodies that also serve as breeding sites. This frog is often said[by whom?] to estivate in small mammal burrows or under damp leaf litter, though this statement is under dispute. The California Red-legged Frog is an important food source for the endangered San Francisco Garter Snake.

The tadpoles (larvae) of this species may metamorphose into frogs within several months of hatching from the egg, or may "overwinter". Transformation for overwintering tadpoles may take 13 months or more. Recent discoveries, such as overwintering, have management implications for this threatened species, particularly when aquatic habitat undergoes modification.

Human relations

California red-legged frog in habitat

After years of litigation initiated by land developers organizations, specifically the Home Builders Association of Northern California, and scientific back-and-forth, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced in April 2006 the designation of about 450,000 acres (1800 km²) of critical California habitat for the threatened frog. This protected habitat did not include any land in Calaveras County, the setting of Mark Twain's short story, "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County", which features this species.

On 17 September 2008, the US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to more than triple the habitat of the California red-legged frog, citing political manipulation by former deputy assistant secretary at the United States Department of the Interior Julie MacDonald. According to the Los Angeles Times, "Development and destruction of wetlands have eliminated the frogs from more than 70% of their historic range. MacDonald would have reduced what was left of the frog's range by 82%."[1]

References

  1. ^ A California frog may be about to get room to stretch its red legs

See also


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