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Detroit Zoo Leaps into 2008 with "Year of the Frog" Campaign
ROYAL OAK, Mich., December 20, 2007 – Things will be hopping at the Detroit Zoo in the coming year in celebration of all things amphibian as part of the global conservation community’s designation of 2008 as “Year of the Frog.”  The cooperative campaign will focus attention on endangered amphibians and the critical work being done by zoos and aquariums to save them. 

The Detroit Zoo will support the global effort by continuing to develop partnerships and husbandry protocols necessary to maintain endangered amphibian species in captivity.  In addition, the Zoo will launch a yearlong public awareness campaign featuring special events, fundraising activities, educational opportunities and community outreach efforts.

More than a third of the planet’s 6,000 amphibian species are threatened with extinction due to habitat loss, climate change, pollution, pesticides, introduced species, over-collection and infectious diseases, including a deadly parasitic fungus called amphibian chytrid. 

“Amphibians are the proverbial ‘canaries in the coal mine.’  When hundreds of species of an entire class of animal are in decline, it signals a threat to many other species,” said Ron Kagan, Executive Director of the Detroit Zoological Society.  “Our participation in this unified conservation initiative reflects our commitment to a mission of celebrating and saving wildlife.”

Among its many amphibian successes in 2007, the Detroit Zoo produced toadlets through a collaborative captive breeding program for the federally endangered Wyoming toad.  The Zoo has also achieved recent success breeding the endangered Panama golden frog and Emperor newt. 

The Zoo is home to the nationally award-winning National Amphibian Conservation Center (NACC), a state-of-the-art facility situated on a two-acre wetland village called Amphibiville.  The NACC features a spectacular diversity of amphibians, including frogs, toads, salamanders, newts and caecilians.  The Wall Street Journal once dubbed the attraction “Disneyland for toads.”

The Detroit Zoological Society is a non-profit organization that operates the Detroit Zoo and Belle Isle Nature Zoo.  Situated on 125 acres of naturalistic exhibits, the Detroit Zoo is located at the intersection of Ten Mile Road and Woodward Avenue, just off I-696, in Royal Oak.  The Detroit Zoo is open daily 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. November through March and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April through October.  Admission is $11.00 for adults 13 to 61, $9.00 for senior citizens 62 and older, and $7.00 for children ages 2 to 12; children under 2 are free.  For more information, call (248) 541-5717 or visit www.detroitzoo.org.  The Belle Isle Nature Zoo is open daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. year-round and provides educational programming with interpretive staff support from the Huron-Clinton Metroparks.  For more information, call (313) 852-4056. 
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Friday, 16 May 2008

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