Why Toads Frogs And Newts Need Our Help
Thursday, March 11th, 2010In the United Kingdom today the amphibian popuation is swiftly dwindling and faces long term survival challenges of almost overwhelming proportions. The key factors lending to this decline are habitat loss, pollution and disease. Many experts concur that unless something significant is done we could see the loss of these amazing animals in our lifetime.
When i think myself back to my childhood days I can recall many a fine day as a boy with my friends at the local pools or the brook, endless summertime days catching frogs and newts and sticklebacks (we invariably let them go!). It embodied a really great childhood, I was very lucky.
A few years ago I travelled back to the region I grew up in, in that location is now a car park where those fantastic old pools were. The brook is fouled and looked stagnant and devoid of life. These days in our over-developed urban areas such habitats are getting rarer and rarer.
The total number of habitats wasted to development has been catastrophic and irreversible. Many sites have been preserved from development by the presence of great-crested newts or natterjack toads, the rarest of our native species.