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Hawaii's hated frogs: tiny invaders raise a big ruckus.


Puerto Rico's beloved mascot is a miniature tree frog tree frog, name for any of the small tree- or shrub-inhabiting frogs of the family Hylidae, characterized by an adhesive disk on the tip of each of the clawlike toes.  named for its distinctive call: ko-KEE. All night long, choirs of love-starved males serenade serenade [Ital. sera=evening], term used to designate several types of musical composition. Opera and song literature yield numerous examples of the serenade sung or played by a lover at night beneath his beloved's window; outstanding is  would-be mates, who respond with quiet guttural guttural /gut·tur·al/ (gut´er-il) faucial; pertaining to the throat.

gut·tur·al
adj.
Of or relating to the throat.



guttural

pertaining to the throat.
 chuckles. "To me, it's pleasant--just like birds singing," says Bryan Brunner, a University of Puerto Rico Founded in 1903, the University of Puerto Rico (Universidad de Puerto Rico in Spanish, UPR) is the oldest and largest university system in Puerto Rico. Though Puerto Rico is not a U.S.  plant breeder in Mayaguez. "Here, everybody loves the coquies." And legend has it, he says, that coquies--native only to Puerto Rico--die of sadness when removed from their island.

Hawaiians are lamenting that that fable isn't true.

In the mid-1980s, potted plants from the Caribbean began arriving in Honolulu carrying frogs. Some were 5-centimeter-long coquies (Eleutherodactylus coqui), and others, a quieter and even tinier cousin, the greenhouse frog (Eleutherodactylus planirostris). These stowaways Stowaways are a Portuguese band from Matosinhos, who formed in 2001. They are made up of Nuno Sousa (vocals and guitar); Pedro Gonçalves (guitar); João Carujo, (drums)and Sérgio Seabra (bass). Fred on keyboards and João Covita on the accordion are more recent additions.  reveled in their new setting: a largely amphibian-free land with a bountiful smorgasbord of insects, tiny spiders, mites, and other delectables--and no snakes, tarantulas, or other natural predators.

By the end of 1998, seven populations of coquies had established themselves on the Big Island of Hawaii, recalls Earl Campbell
For the Canadian hockey player, see Earl Campbell (ice hockey).


Earl Christian Campbell (born March 29, 1955) is a former professional American Football running back and is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
 of the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) in Honolulu. And the number has rocketed. "We now have over 400 populations on the Big Island," reports Campbell, the FWS Pacific Basin coordinator for invasive-species issues. He also notes a few coqui outposts on Maui, Kauai, and Oahu.

Local wildlife-protection officials have no trouble recognizing new coqui populations. On the Big Island, public officials receive about 10 complaints a day from homeowners who, unlike Puerto Rican Puer·to Ri·co  
Abbr. PR or P.R.
A self-governing island commonwealth of the United States in the Caribbean Sea east of Hispaniola.
 residents, get fed up with the racket, notes Tim J. Ohashi of the Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services Branch in Honolulu.

A backyard full of the frogs can reach 70 to 90 decibels--the volume of moderate-to-heavy street traffic or the din in neighborhoods along aircraft takeoff and landing corridors. Indeed, 75 decibels is the maximum sound volume that people can encounter at work throughout their careers without risking hearing loss (SN: 5/22/82, p. 347).

Hawaiians aren't used to such nighttime noise. "Because we don't have lots of calling insects, if you go to where the frogs aren't at night, it's dead quiet," observes herpetologist her·pe·tol·o·gy  
n.
The branch of zoology that deals with reptiles and amphibians.



[Greek herpeton, reptile (from herpein, to creep) + -logy.
 William J. Mautz of the University of Hawaii (body, education) University of Hawaii - A University spread over 10 campuses on 4 islands throughout the state.

http://hawaii.edu/uhinfo.html.

See also Aloha, Aloha Net.
 at Hilo. "Then enter an area with a big infestation infestation /in·fes·ta·tion/ (-fes-ta´shun) parasitic attack or subsistence on the skin and/or its appendages, as by insects, mites, or ticks; sometimes used to denote parasitic invasion of the organs and tissues, as by helminths. , and you hit this wall of sound."

But it's not only the noise that has federal officials up in arms armed for war; in a state of hostility.

See also: Arms
. The proliferating coqui and greenhouse frog populations on islands that evolved in the absence of amphibians amphibians

members of the animal class Amphibia. Includes frogs, toads, newts, salamanders and cecilians all capable of living on land or in water.
 threaten to overwhelm native ecosystems. That's why USDA USDA,
n.pr See United States Department of Agriculture.
 has teamed up with the State of Hawaii and FWS to control--and, if possible, eradicate--the tiny hoppers.

The scientists are developing tools, including caffeinated sprays and scalding scalding

plunging of pig or poultry carcasses into very hot water to facilitate scraping and dehairing and plucking. Chicken scalding water is 130°F for broilers (larger birds higher) applied for 1 to 2 minutes. Modern pig abattoirs use steam at 144 to 147°F for about 3 minutes.
 showers, for holding back what they see as an advancing plague of frogs.

HOPPING HATCHLINGS For the many frogs and toads that spend their youths as tadpoles Tadpoles are a psychedelic rock band formed in 1990 in New York City by Todd Parker (guitars/vocals) and Michael Kite Audino (drums.) In 1992, Nick Kramer (guitars/vocals), David Max (bass) and Andrew Jackson (guitars) of the fledgling Manhattan group, Hit, joined the Tadpoles , early survival and development depend on access to water in which they can swim and feed. But for members of Eleutherodactylus, the world's largest genus of vertebrates, young emerge from the egg or from Mom as tiny, fully formed frogs. This opens up a broader range of habitats than is available to tadpoles. Water-soaked moss decorating a potted plant will do, as will the humid packaging around plants, or a spoonful of water cupped in the leaf of an ornamental bromeliad bromeliad, common name for plants of the family Bromeliaceae (pineapple family).
bromeliad

Any of the flowering plants of the order Bromeliales, containing a single family, Bromeliaceae, with almost 2,600 species.
.

Eggs, which coquies and greenhouse frogs lay on the soil, are hard to detect. Normally, male coquies guard their eggs for 2 to 3 weeks--not to fend off predators so much as to keep them moist, explains ecologist Larry Woolbright of Siena College in Loudonville, N.Y. Like a sponge, Dad's underbelly efficiently absorbs water and then releases it onto the eggs. But fatherless eggs could survive transit to Hawaii if they're attached to damp plant material, he says.

At hatching, baby coquies are green and only 5 millimeters long, about the size of a rice grain. Because they're nocturnal and don't begin bellowing bellowing

see bellow.


bellowing continuously
in bovine rabies, continues until pharyngeal paralysis supervenes.

bellowing soundlessly
 their telltale serenades until they're about a year old, the youngsters tend to remain undetected, Woolbright says.

The frogs' catholic tastes facilitate their integration into the Hawaiian environment. After sleeping under leaf litter all day, the tiny amphibians come out after dark to dine. Some stay near the ground, while others ascend into a tree's canopy. Then they sit patiently and await the arrival of the evening's entrees--insects or any other small creature that crawls within pouncing range.

Hawaii's other Caribbean intruders, the greenhouse frogs, also concern scientists. So far, they've conducted relatively few studies of those quiet immigrants, which have proved difficult to find and count.

Though coquies invaded Florida roughly a century ago, they haven't spread far there, Campbell notes, probably because they had plenty of competitors for food and shelter.

But in Hawaii, he observes, "we don't have as many creatures as do ecosystems on the mainland, so we still have a lot of what people might term open niches." When the coquies and greenhouse frogs arrived, they set claim to one such niche.

BEYOND THE RACKET During mating season--which can run year round, depending on the climate--crooning males from ground to treetops produce a three-dimensional fog of sound. To drown it out at bedtime, many Hawaiians run air conditioners as a source of white noise. Others don earplugs.

It's gotten so bad, Ohashi notes, that realtors have been forced to disclose the presence of coquies on listed properties, much as they would evidence of termites, water damage, or structural flaws.

But of even bigger concern to USDA and Hawaii's Department of Agriculture is the frogs' economic threat to Hawaiian plant growers plant growers,
n.pl individuals who cultivate medicinally beneficial plants for use in herbal remedies.
, notes Ohashi's colleague Will Pitt at USDA's Wildlife Services research center in Hilo. Sales of orchids and other tropical plants amount to a huge export industry. Buyers on the Hawaiian islands that are still free of coquies and greenhouse frogs are now rejecting some potted plants grown on the Big Island. It may not be long, Pitt speculates, before the frog scare affects foreign trade or plant shipments to the U.S. mainland. Any impact on Hawaii's $80-million-per-year cut-flower-export industry would be especially troublesome.

Rather than simply imposing a quarantine on plants in frog-infested areas of Hawaii, Pitt says, government agencies want to offer growers tools for coping with the problem. The proposed arsenal is remarkably low-tech.

"We started, about 2 years ago, looking at trapping--hand captures--but it was not at all effective," says Pitt.

So, Campbell, who was then with USDA, began screening off-the-shelf agents that might poison the frogs without harming their environment. "I started by looking at insecticides for use on ornamentals, probably 20 to 25 compounds," he says. None killed frogs at permitted application rates.

Then Campbell heard that acetaminophen--the active ingredient An active ingredient, also active pharmaceutical ingredient (or API), is the substance in a drug that is pharmaceutically active. Some medications may contain more than one active ingredient.  in Tylenol--works as a poison to control the invasive brown tree snake brown tree snake

see boigairregularis.
 on Guam (SN: 8/10/02, p. 85). He redirected his attention to over-the-counter drugs and food additives food additives, substances added to foods by manufacturers to prevent spoilage or to enhance appearance, taste, texture, or nutritive value. By quantity, the most common food additives are flavorings, which include spices, vinegar, synthetic flavors, and, in the . Again, the results were abysmal--until he tested a popular formulation for staying awake that contains caffeine. In Campbell's lab, coqui and greenhouse frogs died quickly after being sprayed with a 2-percent-caffeine solution, which contains a far higher concentration of caffeine than coffee does.

KILLING THEM SOFTLY Because caffeine has never been federally approved as a pesticide, the State of Hawaii had to petition the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  for permission to experiment outdoors with the antifrog stimulant. The agency granted the state permission to try a 2-percent-caffeine solution as an experimental pesticide spray for 1 year.

Pitt says that tests on small plots of infested in·fest  
tr.v. in·fest·ed, in·fest·ing, in·fests
1. To inhabit or overrun in numbers or quantities large enough to be harmful, threatening, or obnoxious:
 greenery proved that the spray is indeed "an effective frogicide, if you will." Best of all, he says, caffeine exhibited "very few impacts on other, non-target organisms." For instance, insect populations in sprayed plots declined a bit, but within a week had returned to normal. The tests turned up another potential benefit. Garden slugs, the bane BANE. This word was formerly used to signify a malefactor. Bract. 1. 2, t. 8, c. 1.  of the orchid industry, rose to the surface of treated soils and died (http://sciencenews.org/20020706/food, asp).

In September, the temporary EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
 permission for testing expired. USDA has now applied for a 3-year extension to conduct further research that might eventually lead to caffeine's federal approval as a frog-control agent.

"But we don't want to limit ourselves to one tool," Pitt says, so his laboratory has continued testing other unusual candidate frogicides. It recently uncovered one that's so safe a food product that EPA doesn't regulate it. It's citric acid citric acid or 2-hydroxy-1,2,3-propanetricarboxylic acid, HO2CCH2C(OH)(CO2H)CH2CO2 , the primary constituent of lemon juice.

Preliminary tests, begun in August, used a citric-acid formulation roughly comparable to double-strength lemon juice. The spray isn't quite as potent as caffeine for killing frogs, Pitt told Science News. Nevertheless, early data on citric acid "look very promising," he says, "and we see very little impact on plants."

In July, the Honolulu Star Bulletin reported that the Hawaii Department of Agriculture had found that hydrated hy·drat·ed  
adj.
Chemically combined with water, especially existing in the form of a hydrate.

Adj. 1. hydrated - containing combined water (especially water of crystallization as in a hydrate)
hydrous
 lime, the powder used to reduce the acidity of soil, also kills frogs. Ohashi confirms this, but he points out that hydrated lime couldn't legally be used against frogs unless it were to receive federal approval as a pesticide. And that's unlikely, he adds. Manufacturers don't view as worthwhile the prospect of carrying out the necessary safety and efficacy testing, he explains, "because they make enough money selling it for its currently labeled use."

Pitt says that plant growers might also resist lime because it can leave a white residue on treated plants. "If you're an orchid grower selling $200 or $300 plants, a little leaf spotting may not be acceptable," he says.

Finally, several research centers are investigating an experimental nursery technique to prevent the spread of frogs in potted plants. Ed Brodie of Hawaii's Division of Forestry and Wildlife in Hilo, for instance, has fine-tuned an $11,000 computer-controlled device that sprays hot water onto a few potted plants at a time to kill pests. A 3-minute spray of 46.5[degrees]C (116[degrees]F) water kills any coquies and greenhouse frogs present. As a bonus, he says, the treatment kills geckos GeckOS is an experimental operating system for MOS 6502 and compatible processors. It offers some Unix-like functionality including preemptive multitasking, multithreading, semaphores, signals, binary relocation, TCP/IP networking via SLIP and a 6502 standard library. , centipedes centipedes

many-legged members of the class Chilopoda of the phylum Arthropoda. They are relatively harmless, but some of the 1500 species can inflict a painful bite to humans and it seems reasonable to assume that bites to animals could happen.
, and about everything else in the soil except ants.

Brodie's lab includes a nursery for endangered and native plants. Over the past 3 years, workers there have treated up to 1,000 plants a day with the hot-water spray. The only downside so far is that orchid blooms wilt, but the rest of the plant remains healthy.

CLOCK 15 TICKING Other than noise pollution, the frogs' effect on Hawaii is hard to characterize, Campbell says. Ordinarily, scientists gauge environmental impacts by comparing before-and-after data on species in a region invaded by an alien. In Hawaii, however, there's little pre-invasion data for most areas now infested with coquies and greenhouse frogs.

However, the overwhelming numbers of frogs in those areas convince Mautz that "there will be impacts," he says. He's particularly concerned about the frogs' consuming insects now available to birds.

Woolbright agrees. His surveys of 20-m-square forest plots in Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla.  have turned up an average coqui concentration of about 2 per square meter. But more important, he says, is the number of reproductively mature adults. Typically, a 4-night survey logs 40 adults in a 20-by-20-m plot.

This summer, he set up similar plots in Hawaii. During one 4-night census, "we got 200 adults in one plot," he told Science News.

The abundance of coquies in Hawaii probably traces to a lack of predators. Woolbright says that Puerto Rican coquies are a dietary staple of rats, screech owls, cuckoos, snakes, tarantulas, and many others. During a typical night's survey of his plots in Puerto Rico, six to eight coqui predators show up. "In our plots in Hawaii, we found none," he says.

In Hawaii, "I estimate that about 200 kilograms of arthropods [such as insects and spiders] per hectare per year go to feed the frogs," Mautz says. "So, you now have an invader that's suddenly commanding a huge piece of the whole food chain." The open question is, he says, Whose dinner are coquies stealing?

The greenhouse frogs raise additional concerns. They frequently turn up Where coquies have settled, although their numbers appear relatively small. Campbell notes that this quiet species could be amassing big colonies without anyone knowing it.

"But what actually scares me the most about the frogs being here," Mautz says," is that they'll be food for other invading animals.... If we have this huge food base of frogs, it will be a paradise found for invading snakes." Hawaiian ecologists have long scouted for invading brown tree snakes, which occasionally stow away on planes landing in Honolulu.

In theory, it's not too late to think about eradicating coquies, Mautz contends. They could easily be hunted down. Even now, there are only several hundred reported populations, some with just a few isolated animals. He estimates that the frogs cover only about 1,000 acres statewide.

"If true," he maintains, "you could apply a scorched-earth policy Scorched-earth policy

Often used in risk arbitrage. Any technique a company that has become the target of a takeover attempt uses to make itself unattractive to the acquirer.
 to [routing] them" with caffeine or citric acid. Then again, he concedes, getting the political will to cut through the environmental red tape for such dramatic action would be difficult.

Stall too long, Mautz warns, and it may be too late to do anything but learn to live with the noisy immigrants. "The way I see it," he says, "we've only got 5 years, maybe 10."

Indeed, Woolbright says, "I see no quick, clean, and easy way to remove these frogs from sensitive island habitats like Hawaii." Start unleashing poisons, even one as mild as caffeine, and things could get ecologically messy, he worries.

In the end, he suspects, "this just might turn out to be a situation where [Hawaiians] will have to grin and bear it Grin and Bear It is a daily panel comic strip created by George Lichtenstein under the penname George Lichty. It has been syndicated from 1932 through 1940, and from 1942 through to today. ."
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:populations of coquies, frogs native to Puerto Rico, invade Hawaii
Author:Raloff, Janet
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Cover Story
Geographic Code:1U9HI
Date:Jan 4, 2003
Words:2263
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