Thursday, May 26, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Saving the Relict Leopard Frog
At one point the relict leopard frog was thought to be extinct. But in the early nineties the frog was rediscovered at various springs in southern Nevada. A team of biologists from UNLV working with federal wildlife officials recently backpacked buckets of relict leopard frogs to a spring near Lake Mohave. The latest is one of about 10 releases of relict leopard frogs into the wild. Project leader Jef Jaeger is a research professor at UNLV Public Lands Institute and he joins us to talk about releasing the relict leopard frog into the wild and why the species is important to the area.
GUEST
Jef Jaeger, Research Asst Prof, Public Lands Institute and School of Life Sciences, UNLV
Listen Now
GUEST
Jef Jaeger, Research Asst Prof, Public Lands Institute and School of Life Sciences, UNLV
Listen Now
Monday, May 9, 2011
Biologists hope new home keeps frogs from croaking
"Biologists hope new home keeps frogs from croaking," by Keith Rogers, Las Vegas Review-Journal. View Video
Friday, May 6, 2011
High schoolers use GPS for habitat restoration
"High schoolers use GPS for habitat restoration," by Alyson Mack, 3/17/2011
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