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scripps institution of oceanography

Return of the frogs

September 22, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Mountain yellow-legged frog may make a comeback

The mountain yellow-legged frog is a species that lives in the mountains of Southern California.  It is listed as an endangered species for protection by the federal government.   Surveys 20 years ago determined that the frog’s population was declining and on a trajectory toward extinction.  The frogs are severely impacted by water pollution and are vulnerable to the effects of wildfires, floods, disease, and drought.

A collaboration headed by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego along with the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, UCLA, and the Big Bear Alpine Zoo has been raising mountain yellow-legged frogs in captivity as part of a long-running recovery program with partners at multiple federal and California state agencies.

In August, more than 350 of the frogs were reintroduced into the wild in Southern California’s San Bernardino Mountains, one of the largest releases of the captive-raised frogs to date.  This represented the first species reintroduction by the Scripps Institution and an important milestone in its growing conservation work.

The frogs were transported in coolers to the mountains where a team then hiked the frogs to three sites along a lake within a protected reserve.  The frogs were microchipped with passive transponder tags that will allow researchers to identify individuals during future surveys.  This will enhance long-term monitoring and inform ongoing conservation efforts.

The goal of these efforts is to help to delist or at least downlist the endangered status of the frogs by enhancing the genetic diversity of both captive and wild populations, optimizing reintroduction efforts, and increasing wild frog populations.

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Hundreds of Mountain Yellow-legged Frogs Leap Back Into the Wild

Photo, posted April 27, 2011, courtesy of Rick Kuyper / USFWS via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

Why The Arctic Is Warming So Fast | Earth Wise

April 7, 2020 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

rapid arctic warming

The Arctic has been warming at the fastest rate of any place on Earth.  There have long been observations of amplification of Arctic warming, meaning that its temperature increases have been well above what would be expected from the global temperature rise.

Many climate models have attributed this warming to the melting of sea ice.  As the bright white ice disappears for longer periods of the year, the dark surface waters that are exposed absorb sunlight rather than reflecting it back into space the way the ice does.  This is known as the ice-albedo feedback.  But it does not entirely explain the amount of warming in the Arctic.

Researchers at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography have developed a new theory that helps to explain what is going on.

In the areas of the Arctic Ocean where there is sea ice, the water is actually warmer at depth and colder near the surface.  The deeper waters are fed by the relatively warm Pacific and Atlantic Oceans while the surface water is cooled by the ice.  The increasing temperature difference between surface and deeper water causes a greater upward flow of heat.  This was first observed in research cruises that revealed evidence that the Arctic Ocean water was becoming more turbulent over time.

According to computer modeling, this phenomenon is responsible for about 20% of the amplification of global warming that occurs in the Arctic.

There are multiple ongoing studies looking at the Arctic warming trend.  Other factors that have contributed over time are the presence of chlorfluorocarbons in the atmosphere.   That contribution is waning since the use of CFCs has been phasing out over time.

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Researchers Find New Reason Why Arctic is Warming So Fast

Photo, posted April 19, 2017, courtesy of Markus Trienke via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio.

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