Authors
Enrique La Marca, Karen R Lips, Stefan Lötters, Robert Puschendorf, Roberto Ibáñez, José Vicente Rueda‐Almonacid, Rainer Schulte, Christian Marty, Fernando Castro, Jesús Manzanilla‐Puppo, Juan Elías García‐Pérez, Federico Bolaños, Gerardo Chaves, J Alan Pounds, Eduardo Toral, Bruce E Young
Publication date
2005/6
Journal
Biotropica: The Journal of Biology and Conservation
Volume
37
Issue
2
Pages
190-201
Publisher
Blackwell Science Inc
Description
We surveyed the population status of the Neotropical toad genus Atelopus, and document recent catastrophic declines that are more severe than previously reported for any amphibian genus. Of 113 species that have been described or are candidates for description, data indicate that in 42 species, population sizes have been reduced by at least half and only ten species have stable populations. The status of the remaining taxa is unknown. At least 30 species have been missing from all known localities for at least 8 yr and are feared extinct. Most of these species were last seen between 1984 and 1996. All species restricted to elevations of above 1000 m have declined and 75 percent have disappeared, while 58 percent of lowland species have declined and 38 percent have disappeared. Habitat loss was not related to declines once we controlled for the effects of elevation. In fact, 22 species that occur in …
Total citations
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