small tree frog looks out from a leaf

Volume 64  Issue 3

Summer 2015

A frog of the genus Mantella (Mantella ebenaui or M. betsileo). The International Union for Conservation of Nature describes 16 species in this genus, all native only to Madagascar. The populations of 11 of those are listed as “declining,” with seven “endangered” or “critically endangered.” Habitat loss is cited as a primary factor. For some, however, another threat looms large: collection for the pet trade. The situation is bleak the world over for frogs and their amphibian kin. Hundreds of millions of amphibians are plucked from the wild each year, to be traded as pets, eaten, sent to laboratories, or dissected in classrooms. Click here for more about the global onslaught on wild amphibians to feed an international trade that is cruel, wasteful, and not remotely sustainable.



More in this Issue

Saving the Vaquita: Mexico Acts, but Is It Enough?

Endangered Species, Marine Wildlife

Sharks and Barks: Texas Two-Step for Animals

Companion Animals, Marine Wildlife

Reviews

a whale's tail sticks out of the water's surface

BREACH

Marine Wildlife
a mustang looks out upon a lush western landscape

Saving the Pryor Mountain Mustang

Equines, Terrestrial Wildlife
wolf howls above

The Trap

Terrestrial Wildlife