Young
Ghanaian scientist, Gilbert Baase Adum of the Kwame Nkrumah University of
Science and Technology (KNUST), led a team of international research scientists
to undertake the study, which was recently published in Conservation Biology, the world’s leading academic journal in its field.
Logging
has been a prime factor to the declining amphibian populations worldwide. Until
this study, it remained largely unclear how long it takes frogs to recover to
their former state after logging.
“In
our study of three south-western Ghanaian commercially-logged forests, it took
10 years for non-forest dependent frogs to return to their former levels, and
forest-dependent frogs decreased and did not recover until after 20 years of
logging”, said Gilbert.
“But
low logging intensity, remnant patches of intact forests retained in the
landscape, and presence of permanent streams or rivers may have aided in the
rapid recovery of frogs”.
The
one-year study also recorded the highest number of Ghana’s Endangered Squeaker
Frog (Arthroleptis krokosua) since its discovery – 14 individual frogs
were found.
The
research scientists were from the KNUST (Ghana), the University of Nottingham
(United Kingdom), Humboldt University (Germany) and the Zoological Society of
London (United Kingdom).
This
project received funding from UK DEFRA through the ZSL-Wildlife Wood Project,
with additional funding provided by Trobenbos Ghana, BirdLife International and
the Cambridge Student Conference on Conservation Science.
The
authors see hope for the future of conservation in West African forests, observing
that “some portion of the surviving wildlife can apparently recover when
forests are subsequently left undisturbed”.
They
have therefore called for the preservation of African logged forests alongside
undisturbed forests.
Over
90% of Ghana’s rainforests have been destroyed and Ghana’s frogs are rapidly
disappearing.
Gilbert’s
Baase Adum, who is also the Executive Director of SAVE THE FROGS! Ghana, emphasized the need for government and conservation agencies to collaborate
with his NGO to protect Ghana's
amphibian populations and to promote a society that respects and appreciates
nature and wildlife.
The
NGO has also advocated the establishment of Ghana’s sixth national park by
turning the unprotected Atewa Forest Range Reserve into the Atewa Hills
National Park.
The
reserve has exceptionally high amphibian biodiversity and is home to an array
of other wildlife species, but is under constant threat from bauxite mining and
unsustainable logging.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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