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1 December 2015 Fighting Extinction: Zoos Victoria's Commitment to Endangered Herpetofauna
T. Franciscus Scheelings
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Abstract

Since European settlement, Australia has a worse extinction record than any other nation on Earth. In addition, Australia has the highest number of threatened reptile and amphibian species in the world. In response to the serious threats posed to indigenous herpetofauna, Zoos Victoria (ZV) has embarked on a series of conservation campaigns to preserve some of the country's most endangered species. These include the Baw Baw frog (Philoria frosti), southern corroboree frog (Pseudophryne corroboree), northern corroboree frog (Pseudophryne pengilleyi), spotted tree frog (Litoria spenceri), stuttering frog (Mixophyes balbus), grassland earless dragon (Tympanocryptis pinguicolla), alpine she-oak skink (Cylodomorphus praealtus), and Guthega skink (Liopholis guthega). The aims of this article are to outline the main threats that have resulted in the decline of these species and the measures that ZV is undertaking in order to fight their extinction.

T. Franciscus Scheelings "Fighting Extinction: Zoos Victoria's Commitment to Endangered Herpetofauna," Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery 25(3-4), 100-106, (1 December 2015). https://doi.org/10.5818/1529-9651-25.3.100
Published: 1 December 2015
JOURNAL ARTICLE
7 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
Alpine she-oak skink
Baw Baw frog
conservation
grassland earless dragon
Guthega skink
northern corroboree frog
southern corroboree frog
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