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The tree frog's loss warns of other extinctions, says the photographer who featured the animal in his Photo
Ark project.
Toughie, the last known Rabbs' fringe-limbed tree frog, has passed away.
Photograph by Joel Sartore, National Geographic Photo Ark
Atlanta Botanical Garden
By Brian Handwerk
Toughie, the world's last Rabbs' fringe-limbed tree frog and a symbol of the extinction crisis, has died
at his home in the Atlanta Botanical Garden.
The famed frog's age is unknown, but he's at least 12 years old, and likely older, because he was an
adult when collected in 2005.
Mark Mandica, who worked with Toughie for seven years, says the frog's story isn't entirely unique.
A lot of attention had been paid to him in captivity, so he even has his own Wikipedia page,
Mandica, head of the Amphibian Foundation, notes. But there are plenty of other species out there
that are disappearing, sometimes before we even knew that they were there.
In fact, Toughie's own species (Ecnomiohyla rabborum) wasn't described until 2008, a few years after
Toughie was found during a 2005 frog rescue mission by the Atlanta Botanical Garden and Zoo
Atlanta. He was one of many frogs scientists raced to collect as the deadly chytrid fungus closed in on
central Panama.
It was likened to just rescuing things from a burning house, Mandica says.
The species occurred in a very small range, at an elevation where the fungus proved especially deadly.
Field studies suggest up to 85 percent of all the amphibians on Toughie's home turf were wiped out.
It's unlikely that any of his kind survived in the wild, where they were incredible climbers and also
graceful gliderstoe webbing allowed them to soar from one tree to the next. (Learn about the
increasing pace of extinctions.)
Watch: This tree frog's death marks the end for a species.
Naming a Survivor
Mandica's son, then a two-year-old, dubbed the last survivor Toughie. Naming animals isn't the norm
among scientists, but the frog's popularity as the last of his kind meant that people (and the press)
kept demanding a nameand Toughie stuck.
Although he gave voice to the plight of endangered species, Toughie was silent for all the years he lived
at the botanical garden, until one fateful morning in 2014 when Mandica captured the only existing
example of the Rabbs' fringe-limbed tree frog's call.
I heard this weird call coming out of the frog [area], and I knew it had to be him, because I knew
what all the other species sounded like. I was able to sneak in and record him on my phone. (Hear
Toughie's call.)
Picture of Toughie, the last Rabbs' fringe limbed tree frog
View Images
Toughie was photographed in his captive home at the Atlanta Botanical Garden.
Photograph by Joel Sartore, National Goegraphic Photo Ark
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Photographer Joel Sartore recalls a curious, baseball-size creature with amazing eyes that actually hopped up
onto his camera while being photographed for the Photo Ark project. Photo Ark aims to showcase our
planet's incredible biodiversity and inspire people to help fight the extinction crisis while there is still time.
So far, Sartore has photographed more than 6,000 species. Unfortunately, many others also represent the end
of the line for their kind.
About once a year I photograph something that's the last of its kind or close to it, he says. I get sad and
angry because I can't imagine that this won't wake the world up and get people to care about extinction. I
keep thinking, OK, this is the one. This animal's story is going to do it and get people to care more about
extinction than about what's on TV.
They can't care if they don't know these animals, he adds. They have to meet them and fall in love with
them the way that I have and so many others have.
Toughie, indeed, had lots of admirers. Last year his image was even projected onto St. Peter's Basilica, and
his call played, so that the world could see and hear him.
The frog met race car drivers and movie directors, Sartore recalls. A lot of people were moved to tears
when they saw him. When you have the very last of something it's a special deal.
Now he's gone, and with him an entire species. And as large numbers of animals and plants continue to
vanish, their loss increasingly compromises the healthy ecosystems necessary for everyone's survival
including our own. (Can extinct species ever be brought back?)
We're on track to lose half of all species by the end of the century, Sartore says. And it's folly to think that
we can lose half of everything else but that people will be just fine. It's not going to work that way. As these
species go, so do we.
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