Beautiful Forest Toad (Churamiti maridadi) Case Study
Home > Biodiversity Nature & People > Conservation Philanthropy > Grants > MBZF Grant 180518076
Continent: Africa
Country: Tanzania
Grant Amount: $2,500
Awarded Date: June 10, 2018
Hans Christoph Liedtke
Biological Station Doñana, Spain
Calle Americo Vespucio 26
Seville
Seville
41092
Spain
Tel: +34954232340
Mob:
Saving Africa’s Beautiful Tree Toad (Churamiti maridadi; Bufonidae)
With only a handful of sightings, the aptly named Beautiful Forest Toad is as elusive as it is stunning. It's known range is restricted to a very small patch of forest, which has not been properly surveyed by herpetologists in the last decade. To assess its conservation status, we aim to seek it out, on the top of one of Tanzania's Eastern Arc Mountains.
Churamiti maridadi is listed as ‘Critically Endangered' on the IUCN Red List, yet there is no conservation action in place because very little is known about the species. There have only been a handful of sightings since its discovery in 2002 (Channing and Stanley, 2002, Afr. J. Herpetol), with none in the last ten years. Suitable habitat (moist forest edges) in the area is extremely fragmented and C. maridadi has yet to be reported from other sites. The type locality however is a protected reserve and despite increases in agricultural activity, areas of suitable habitat remain giving reason to believe the species is still there. The Ukaguru mountains host at least 10 endemic vertebrates and large trees of the Eastern Arc Mountains (EAM; Burgess et al. 2007, Biol. Cons.) and the transition zone between forest and open habitat has been the focus of recent studies in the region in an effort to highlight their importance in terms of species richness.
We have gathered an international team of herepetolgists from 5 countries (Spain, Italy, Tanzania, United Kingdom and the United States of America) to try to find this elusive creature and to learn more about its natural history.
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