Posts by chas: |
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chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 30 Jan 2005
Topic: Common Frog Sample
Not quite sure what is meant by your "sample images". Are they on the site? I would like to see them. I am, at present, doing some research on brown frog morphology which includes a discussion of colour and variety of marking -- so I might find them useful. I am very interested, at present, on gaining information on the provenance of the common frog depicted on the RAUK site's "Species Identification" page. Can you or the membership help on this?
Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 31 Jan 2005
Topic: European pond tortoise Emys orbicularis
A "Survival Anglia" wildlife film producer met with a large female Emys orb. (Euro. pond tortoise) crossing a narrow, isolated lane in N. Norfolk in the 1990s. Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 31 Jan 2005
Topic: Pool Frog reintroduction
Regarding earlier comments made on these pages: a) Re. GemmaÆs posting ( b) Regarding John Burton's posting it would be best to read: Tegelstr÷m, H. & Sj÷gren-Gulve, P. (2004). Genetic differentiation among northern European pool frog (Rana lessonae) populations. Herpetological Journal 4: 187-193. The authors conclude that the diversity found in Sweden's pool frog populations indicate that they are a relict population rather than being descendants of an introduction, and that the Swedish, Norwegian and British frogs are part of a northern clade.
I would also add that an introduction from elsewhere is an extremely unlikely scenario based on a range of evidence, notably: the genetic identity and relations between the 3 national populations (they are closely related but have significant differences), the fact that pool frogs have been confirmed in Middle Saxon times in and recent habitat associations of northern clade pool frogs, and the fact that early, multiple introductions from a (genetically) northern clade source - with no likely source or agents so far proposed - to the different countries might need to be invoked. In addition to the refereed papers listed on these pages so far, two more relevant works are about to be published: 1) Beebee, T.J.C., Buckley, J., Evans, Gleed-Owen, C.P., Kelly, G., Rowe, G., Snell, C., Wycherley, J.T. & Zeisset, Resolution of a conservation dilemma concerning the pool frog Rana lessonae. Biodiversity and Conservation. 2) Snell, C., Tetteh, J., Evans I. H. (in press). Phylogeography of the Pool Frog (Rana lessonae Camerano) in in Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.
Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 03 Feb 2005
Topic: Pool Frog reintroduction
Re. John If Sweden was colonised naturally, the view that Denmark should also hold pool frog populations, is to assume that post-glacial colonisation was a simple matter of south to north migration and also to assume that the pool frog is a generalist (and not a specialist or relict species, as is the case with northern clade pool frogs) as far as habitat is concerned. We (Snell, C., Tetteh, J., Evans I. H. (in press)) have proposed that, based on the genetic evidence, on reaching the Baltic there was an east to west migration route to Britain with East Anglia as the first area colonised (bear in mind that the S. North Sea was dry land at that point and there were thousands of glacially created ponds ideal for amphibia; the Norfolk pingos being a relict landscape from that time).
Answer (to some extent, hopefully) to GemmaÆs last posting: The pool frog is far from being a generalist in its habitat preference; in my view also, the pool frog is, among the green frogs, to some extent a pioneer species. That is to say, it is more cold tolerant and moves more quickly to colonise new ground after the retreat of ice. Pool frogs, are a relict species in The processes leading to the highly fragmented natures of relict populations are well documented. Current distributions are influenced by past colonisation routes; the habitat around them may have changed considerably (naturally or through human action); they manage to persist in few isolated locations with suitable habitat and climatic conditions. Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 19 Feb 2005
Topic: Pool Frog reintroduction
Re. John This post contains serious errors which need to be clarified to avoid any further confusion. Re. "English (pool) frogs are almost certainly contaminated with introduced (edible frog) genes" Pool frogs cannot be produced by matings between edible frogs û they can only be produced by pool frogs to pool frog matings. Diploid edible frog to edible frog matings, at most, can only producd female marsh frogs with no or limited viability, as far as a producing a non- hybrid species is concerned. As the pool frog chromosomes are eliminated in diploid edible frogs before the production of eggs or sperm, edible frog to pool frog matings only produce more edible frogs (i.e. what amounts virtually to F1s, anything to comparable to F2 generations are not produced), ôcontaminatedö pool frogs are not produced. Incidentally, the known introductions by Berney amounted to about 1500 individual frogs and not "thousands". Re. "As Boulenger believed, the specimens collected by Thurnall et al were all descended from known introductions" This is a mistaken interpretation of Boulenger. To quote from Boulenger; "it is clear to me, therefore, that all the specimens (of lessonae) the capture of which has hitherto been recorded, whether from Cambridgeshire or Norfolk, are not the descendants of those introduced by Mr Berney, but are of Italian origin. By whom and when they were introduced in this country I cannot venture to suggest." (The Zoologist, 1884). It is clear from this that he did not think they were from a ôknown introductionö. He assigned an Italian origin on the basis that, other than those he'd seen in Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 27 Feb 2005
Topic: Pool Frog reintroduction
Re. John John indicates that he believes that my comments on BoulengerÆs view on the origin of the pool frogs in On pages 271-272 he states that Rana lessonae ôis perhaps introduced from From my post (nineteenth of February, last two paragraphs) it is clear that Boulenger's later views even more closely support the views stated there and I fail to see why Boulenger's later work was quoted as evidence to the contrary. Once again I can only repeat that the view (14th of February, this site) that Boulenger considered that the Re. John I entirely agree with John's figures for BerneyÆs edible frog introductions near Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 08 Apr 2005
Topic: Marsh Frog Identification & Sightings
Does anyone out there have any info. on the earliest dates of calling or spawning in the marsh frog -- even approx. (it's to assist some research)? Many Thanks!
Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 02 May 2005
Topic: Marsh Frog Identification & Sightings
Lee, the calls are distinct - I expect Chris M. would have given a correct ID. There may be no connection then between the 2 populations. A marsh frog call can be heard at http://waterfrogs.csit.fsu.edu/PBhtmls/ridibunda.html#voice This site has the other water frog calls for comparison Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 10 May 2005
Topic: Gravid Dice Snake
I was showing a group of foreign visitors around a wildlife site in southeast London in July 2003 when a group of nervous looking ladies in the party inquired if there were any snakes on the site. I assured them that none had ever been seen on the site. I then lifted a log and out sprang a large, near-black snake hissing furiously. It took me another 10 minutes to regather the group together. It turned out to be a female dice snake (Natrix tassellata) 3'4" long and very gravid. The snake was removed from the site - as it was clearly alien - and laid 24 fertile eggs two days later. Reports I gathered from birdwatchers later suggested that there were at least two other dice snakes in the area which would account the fact that the snake had been fertilised. So for no more have been spotted in 2004 or spring 2005. Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 10 May 2005
Topic: Pool Frog reintroduction
The pool frog paper mentioned earlier in this forum is now in print. Snell, C., Tetteh, J., Evans I. H. (May, 2005). Phylogeography of the Pool Frog (Rana lessonae Camerano) in in Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 85: pp 41-51 Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 10 May 2005
Topic: Lizards!
Water under the bridge now, but removing the ponds will not deter adders-only grass snakes. Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 10 May 2005
Topic: Lizards!
Iexpect the new garden design has been the deterrent for the adders rather than the removal of the pond! The lizards will only take the flying ants as they are formic acid free. I guess you are seeing both ants and lizards together as they both seek out warmth. I would be careful about using ant powder to control the ants as this may prove toxic to the lizards when they walk around tasting the ground with their tongues. Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 17 May 2005
Topic: spawning dates
Hi John, The dates for pool frog spawn seem weeks later than the earliest spawning for marsh frogs - I'm still waiting to some records to be entered on another page on this site regarding marsh frog spawning dates! Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 22 Aug 2005
Topic: European pond tortoise Emys orbicularis
David Bird's post about keeping the Remains of the European pond tortoise have been found in There is also no doubt that introductions to East Anglia have occurred; for example some were released in Blaxhall and Little Glemham in Suffolk between 1894 - 95. There have been sporadic sightings in Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 22 Aug 2005
Topic: European pond tortoise Emys orbicularis
It has always been assumed in Denmark that the pond tortoise died out between the iron and Bronze ages, but as David Bird points out in his last post, some were found in the 1990s of unknown origin. I have found two Danish web sites on Emys (in Danish) both seem to suggest that there are still some Emys in central Jutland. One of the sites also indicated that there are a few on the island of Bornholm and that those on Jutland had been genetically tested (8 were caught and seven were tested) the results showing that the animals were not of the type found further south in Europe. This, of course, increases the likelihood (but not proving the case) of there being being a relict population. Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 01 Sep 2006
Topic: Marsh Frog Identification & Sightings
Re. query (Peter Sutton). Whilst researching the pool frog, in case any were still left somewhere in the wild, I was sent a reference to "edible frogs" in or near the levels in Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 06 Jan 2007
Topic: European Tree Frogs
The issues surrounding the new Forest and I knew of one in Hyla arborea colony in a garden in The There were unconvincing rumours that the introduction of this older colony was via Mr Turner Turner who, it was rumored, brought them back from his travels in I wrote at some length, with illustrations, on the tree frog in Finally, the earliest records of the species in Britain start with Sir Thomas Browne in 1646 who wrote of them (when discussing frogs in Britain) being ôa little frog of an excellent Parrat green, that usually sits on Trees and Bushesö and later in that same century Dr Christopher Merrett (1667) lists them as part of British fauna. It is not inconceivable, therefore, that this hardy species was once part of our fauna. Hyla arborea is a very hardy amphibian and can survive being frozen solid. This ability allows it to live as far north as southern Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 06 Jan 2007
Topic: European Tree Frogs
Thanks for that, Jon. We do seem to be talking about the same colony of tree frogs in Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 09 Mar 2007
Topic: Particularly Bright Wall Lizard
Re. the Kidbrooke wall lizard colony. At one point the numbers on this site exceeded (to my estimation) well over a thousand in all age classes. The sites on which they were most numerous (the remains of demolished MoD buildings bordering the old A2, Charles Snell |
chas Member Joined: 30 Jan 2005 No. of posts: 27 View other posts in this topic |
Posted: 18 Mar 2007
Topic: Marsh verses Common the debate!
This marsh frog issue is a very interesting one. While IÆve perhaps wished in the past that they werenÆt around, they do seem to have made the marshes in While I was involved in waterfrog research about 10 years ago, I met a Comparative studies on the habitats of the pool, edible and marsh frogs show that marsh frogs prefer larger bodies of water (Lakes, estuarine marshes etc.) as opposed to the pool frogÆs preference for smaller, shallower ponds and, unlike the pool frog, is able to more successfully share the water with fish. The hybrid edible frog has preferences approximately midway between these extremes for the parental species. The marsh frogÆs optimal habitat is, therefore, not a resource ever exploited successfully by the common frog (this would explain the absence of common frogs on the Isle of Grain). I have found marsh frogs in pools on Grain which were extremely saline (the pools were occasionally fed by high tides and then evaporated in the sun which concentrated the salt levels), pools far too saline for common frogs. In view of the above, it could be seen that, a modern observer of wildlife on the North Kent Marshes may erroneously assume the lack of common frogs is something to do with the large number of Marsh frogs. It is the experience of myself and others that the increased presence of the marsh frog has increased the numbers of grass snakes, and other predators which feed on the frogs or their larvae (egrets, herons, kingfishers, etc). IÆve also seen a large eel take a half-grown marsh frog from the shallows of a marsh fleet near Allhallows, To continue the mammal analogy û think rabbit. This introduced species (rabbit) must have been responsible for an increase in the numbers of buzzards, stoats, foxes, polecats, etc. Certainly, the arrival of myxomatosis in rabbits, caused the populations of many species, especially buzzards, to reduce or crash. Incidentally, even the numbers of sand lizards reduced owing to reduction in the amount of bare sand (e.g. the spoil from rabbit burrows) and an increase in vegetation height which reduced basking areas. What effect a rabbit or marsh frog driven increase in predator numbers has on other fauna is an interesting point though. The effects on dragonflies and damselflies could be ambivalent. Certainly the adult frogs eat adult damsel and dragonflies but likewise, larval dragon and damselflies are very partial to tadpoles. I have no data on the effects marsh frogs in garden ponds and in view of the comments reported to Gemma is clearly an important issue. It would be useful to know how these marsh frogs are colonising small garden ponds, as these, in theory at least, are not the habitat of first choice. Are they being brought in as tadpoles? Marsh frogs are much more frost-tender than common or pool frogs, and unlike these two foregoing species û which hibernate on land (most female common frogs and all pool frogs) or in relatively shallow water (male common frogs) û marsh frogs hibernate in deep water to escape temperature extremes. Most garden ponds donÆt offer sufficient depth and a good frost lasting a few nights giving a good depth of ice should bump marsh frog off. The following is another case where limited or short term observation can lead to the wrong conclusions. Some weekends I am a volunteer warden on a small nature reserve where I have observed waterfrog numbers for 21 years. Six years after the arrival of the first water frogs on the site the common frog numbers collapsed to close to zero and by the end of the following year had reached zero and stayed at that level for seven years. It was suggested the water frogs could have had a possible influence on this. However, common frog numbers had also collapsed over a lot of the areas of southeast Marsh frogs should not be able to affect the breeding of the common frog as the timing of their mating behaviour and spawning is well separated as was reported earlier on these pages. The common frogs spawn û dependent on the yearÆs varying ambient temperatures û any time between late February in the end of March. After this frenzy of activity the adults move away from water, often at considerable distances, for the rest of most of the year; the males returning to hibernate in the water. The marsh frog on the other hand has not left hibernation by the time the common frogs have spawned and dispersed û which leaves little time for them to interact. I would imagine that the marsh frog may have effect on smaller British newts, should they (against habitat preferences!) live in the same water body and this may need more investigation. Against this, as somebody said earlier, newts themselves can have a very negative effect on anuran numbers by eating their larvae û especially the more palatable common frog larvae! Clearly the marsh frog case is not straight forward and the trick is going to be deciding whether the pluses outweigh the minuses. Certainly, the biodiversity gains need consideration and I for one and not unhappy with the increased richness of wildlife on the marshes. However, should this frog naturally (i.e. without human assistance) invade atypical habitats and be shown conclusively to have detrimental effects, then the case becomes more worrying. If the marsh frog manages to get to areas where the pool frog has been reintroduced, then the consequences could be more disastrous as the two species hybridise. At present there are no obvious links of suitable habitat to create corridors to get the marsh frog and the pool frog populations to meet, however. Regarding the different breeding times of these two frog species, I would be EXTREMELY grateful, for research purposes, for any marsh or edible frog records for the earliest time, in any year, that anyone has noticed a) calling, or, b) spawning (or just the finding of eggs). Please state locality. Charles Snell |
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