Southern Cross University has successfully made the first-ever release of captively reared mountain frogs in a remote area of Gondwana Rainforest near the NSW/Qld border.
The species - the Red and Yellow Mountain Frog (Philoria kundagungan) – were successfully reared as part of the University’s Project GRASP (Gondwana Rainforest Amphibian Survival Program) before being returned to a secret location in the Tooloom National Park and released into a predator-free field enclosure.
“The day marks a significant milestone in a decade-long research program to save the Mountain Frogs from extinction,” said Southern Cross University’s Project GRASP lead, Associate Professor David Newell.
Together with Research Fellow Dr Liam Bolitho, the pair collected eggs and adults from the field and have been raising these in captivity since December 2021 and, in a world first, have managed to get them to successfully breed.
“These frogs have a very specialised breeding biology, laying a small number of eggs in a burrow where the tadpoles develop from fertilised eggs without ever having a free-swimming tadpole stage,” said Professor Newell.
“The tadpoles feed entirely from the yolk of the egg sack and then metamorphose into baby frogs about 2-3 mm in length. They are incredibly vulnerable. These ones took about four years to reach maturity.”