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California Commission Lists Yellow-Legged Frog as Endangered

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Photo of a rare mountain yellow-legged frog in an alpine lake in Kings Canyon National Park, in California's Sierra Nevada
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SACRAMENTO — There’s new hope for an endangered California frog that has vanished from half of its habitat.

The state Fish and Game Commission on Wednesday approved protections for five of six populations of the foothill yellow-legged frog.
The state Fish and Game Commission on Wednesday approved protections for five of six populations of the foothill yellow-legged frog.
The Center for Biological Diversity had sought protection for the stream-dwelling amphibians under California’s Endangered Species Act.
The commission voted to list the frogs as endangered in the Southern Sierra, central and southern coasts. Populations in the Northern Sierra and the Feather River will be listed as threatened.
Photo of a researcher inspecting a mountain yellow-bellied frog caught in a pond near in the Sierra Nevada near Ebbetts Pass, Calif.

FILE – In this June 11, 2004, file photo, Vance T. Vredenburg, a researcher from the University of California, Berkeley, inspects a mountain yellow-bellied frog caught in a pond near in the Sierra Nevada near Ebbetts Pass, Calif. The California Fish and Game Commission on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2019, approved California Endangered Species Act protections for five of six populations of a related species, the foothill yellow-legged frog, that has disappeared from more than 50% of its historic habitat in the state. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

Frogs on the State’s Northern Coast ‘Do Not Currently Warrant Protection’

The commission determined that frogs on the state’s northern coast “do not currently warrant protection,” the Center for Biological Diversity said in a statement.
The tiny, pebbly-skinned frogs were once found from Los Angeles County to the Oregon border but their populations have shrunk thanks to threats from human encroachment, dams, climate change, pollution and activities ranging from logging and mining to marijuana growing.
[rlic_related_post_one] Two related species of native frogs that inhabit higher elevations — the Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frog and the mountain yellow-legged frog — are already listed federally and by the state as endangered or threatened.

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