The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is
initiating an evaluation to determine
whether or not to list the Oregon
spotted frog as threatened or endangered
under the Endangered Species Act (ESA).
To assist in this analysis, the Service
is requesting information related to the
species, which is currently a candidate
species considered warranted for ESA
listing. The Service is particularly
interested in collaborating with local,
regional and tribal partners to gather
status information and consider
potential conservation actions affecting
this species.
The Service has been monitoring the
status of the Oregon spotted frog since
the agency’s 1993 determination that the
species warranted listing but any action
was precluded by higher priorities.
Since that determination the Service has
continued to monitor the species’ status
annually, as is done for all candidate
species.
The Oregon spotted frog is the most
aquatic native frog in the Pacific
Northwest. Currently, this species is
known to inhabit emergent wetland
habitats from extreme southwestern
British Columbia south through the east
side of the Puget/Willamette Valley
Trough and the Columbia River Gorge in
south-central Washington to the Cascades
Range and the Klamath Valley in Oregon.
It is believed to have been extirpated
from California.
The Oregon spotted frog is named for
the black spots that cover the head,
back, sides, and legs. Its body color
varies with age and locale. Juveniles
are usually brown or, occasionally,
olive green on the back and white or
cream with reddish pigments on the
underlegs and abdomen. Adults range from
brown to reddish brown but tend to
become redder with age.
Multiple factors are believed to have
caused Oregon spotted frogs to decline
and may continue to threaten this
species. These include destruction,
modification, and curtailment of the
species’ range and available habitat and
introduction of exotic predators such as
bullfrogs.
To ensure this information gathering
is comprehensive, the Service is
requesting scientific and commercial
data and other information regarding
this species and its habitat. To be most
helpful it is important to receive any
information prior to April 20, 2012.
Anyone with information should send it
to: Deanna Lynch, Fish and Wildlife
Biologist, Division of Listing and
Recovery, USFWS, 510 Desmond Drive,
Lacey, WA 98503 or
Deanna_Lynch@fws.gov.
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