Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Lake Oku clawed frog

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Anura

Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Xenopus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Scientific name
  
Xenopus longipes

Rank
  
Species

Lake Oku clawed frog Critically Endangered Lake Oku Clawed Frog Bred at ZSL39s London Zoo

Similar
  
Frog, Xenopus, Amphibians, Volcano clawed frog, Fraser's clawed frog

Lake oku clawed frog xenopus longipes


The Lake Oku clawed frog (Xenopus longipes) is a species of frog in the Pipidae family, endemic to Lake Oku, a small crater lake in northwest Cameroon. It is a small, dark-coloured, fully aquatic frog with a length of 28 to 36 mm (1.1 to 1.4 in), males being slightly smaller than females. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated this frog as "critically endangered" on the basis of its small area of occurrence at a single location, and the possibility that introduction of non-native fish into the lake could cause the frog to be wiped out.

Contents

Lake Oku clawed frog CalPhotos Xenopus longipes Lake Oku Clawed Frog

Xenopus longipes lake oku clawed frog


Description

Lake Oku clawed frog Lake Oku Clawed Frogs California Academy of Sciences

Lake Oku clawed frogs are small, with males growing to an average of 28–31 mm and females 32–36 mm. The name results from the claws at the ends of its two hind feet. Its back is brown, the belly is speckled black on an orange background. These frogs also have an unusually high number of chromosomes, 12 sets. It is fully aquatic, never observed to come out of the water.

Distribution

The Lake Oku clawed frog lives exclusively in Lake Oku, a small crater lake in northwest Cameroon.

Conservation

Lake Oku clawed frog CalPhotos Xenopus longipes Lake Oku Clawed Frog

The Lake Oku clawed frog was assessed to be critically endangered during the IUCN's 2004 Global Amphibian Assessment. This is because of its small range-size (one single crater lake) and the likelihood that fish could be introduced to the lake.

Lake Oku clawed frog httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The lake in which it lives and the surrounding forest are an official government protected area (a "Plantlife Sanctuary"). This and the wider Kilum-Ijim forest (about 20,000 ha) have been subjected to a community forest conservation project facilitated by BirdLife International, the core work concluding in the early 2000s, but with minor projects continuing. The population of X. longipes has been studied by researchers in collaboration with the local community since 2006, including studying the lake's ecology. Conservation breeding populations have been established at several zoos. Efforts are being made by London, Cologne (and previously Antwerp) Zoos to establish a captive breeding program for X. longipes.

Lake Oku clawed frog Lake Oku clawed frog Zoological Society of London ZSL

Lake Oku clawed frog EDGE Blog Froggy Went ACourting

References

Lake Oku clawed frog Wikipedia