Longevity in Captivity of an Endangered Japanese Frog of Hiroshima Prefecture, Ra Porosa Brevipoda

Longevity in Captivity of an Endangered Japanese Frog of Hiroshima Prefecture, Ra Porosa Brevipoda

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Abstract



English Abstract

An endangered Japanese frog R. porosa brevipoda, a subspecies endemic to Japan was the most threatened frog in Hiroshima pref. Captive breeding for the conservation of R. p. brevipoda was first attempted in Japan in 1993. In 1993, one rem nt, the Kisacho-population, located in an isolated basin of Hiroshima pref., was faced with extinction due to the reconstruction of paddy fields to increase rice productivity. Therefore, about 150 froglets were collected from the Kisacho-population to establish a captive stock in October 1993 and maintained by a volunteer group, who were scattered in Kanto District (Okochi et al., 1997). We succeeded in breeding the species by employing a more tural approach (Numazawa et al., 1995). We bred the frog outdoors and without the use of hormone injections in consecutive years, from 1995 to 2000 and the frogs survived until 2001 (Numazawa, 2003). After capture, the frogs survived in an artificial environment from 2431 to 2842 days. The specimens were caught as froglets for captive breeding on October 4 1993. The Kisacho-population has been reported to breed from the beginning of May to late June, before the paddy fields are drained for agricultural purposes (Utsunomiya et al., 1996a). Therefore, it can be estimated that the frog’s longevity is approximately 7-8 years in captivity.

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Article Information

Title (non-english): 広島県産の絶滅危惧種ナゴヤダルマガエル (Ra porosa brevipoda) の飼育下における寿命
Country: Japan
Language: Japanese
Year: 2006
Study Design: After
Authors: Maya Numazawa// Isamu Okochi
Journal: Bulletin of the Herpetological Society of Japan
Volume: 2006
Issue: 2
Pages: 97-99
City/state or province/country: Japan