Salamander Populations Reduced by Climate Change

Reader Contribution by Staff
Published on March 3, 2009
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<p>Biologists from the University of California, Berkeley, have reported that <a href=”http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/02/090209205311.htm” target=”_blank”>salamander populations</a> in parts of Central America have declined sharply in the past 40 years — and global warming could be the cause.</p>
<p>UC Berkeley researchers compared data of current salamander populations in western Guatemala and southern Mexico to data collected from the locations between 1969 and 1978. The team found that two of the most common species of salamanders in the areas 40 years ago are extinct, and several others have experienced large drops in number.</p>
<p>Amphibian populations have been declining worldwide, and experts have attributed the drops in other amphibian species — such as the well-documented plummeting of frog populations — to factors such as pesticides, predators and habitat destruction.</p>

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