{"id":11316,"date":"2021-03-31t16:30:28","date_gmt":"2021-03-31t16:30:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/dr-karen-lips-researching-and-advocating-for-amphibians\/"},"modified":"2023-02-28t18:37:20","modified_gmt":"2023-02-28t18:37:20","slug":"dr-karen-lips-advocating-amphibians","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/dr-karen-lips-advocating-amphibians\/","title":{"rendered":"dr. karen lips: researching and advocating for amphibians"},"content":{"rendered":"
imagine a disease stealthily traveling around the world, killing millions, and not leaving behind a trace of its existence.<\/p>\n
for almost thirty years, karen lips has been studying and advocating for policies to stop one mysterious fungal disease that has irreparably damaged international amphibian populations.<\/p>\n
at the first world congress of herpetology in 1989, scientists compared extinctions of amphibian species in different environments since the 1970s, but they had no idea what was causing these declines. <\/p>\n
lips noticed this same decline as a graduate student in 1992, when she spent a year and a half recording the reproductive season of spiky tree frogs, called isthmohyla calypsa<\/em>, in a cloud forest between costa rica and panama. <\/p>\n lips remembers seeing \u201cfrom like 200 [frogs] in an hour to two all day.\u201d it was a massacre but without any dead frogs left behind. now, if you look up<\/a> the isthmohyla calypsa<\/em> frogs, they are considered critically endangered in panama and extinct in costa rica. <\/p>\n lips remained undeterred by the subject of her studies disappearing over her winter break. she finished her doctorate in tropical biology and began writing about the decline of amphibians in a seemingly pristine habitat. <\/p>\n like she would prove to be for most of her career, lips was ahead of the curve. comparing the earlier extinctions in north costa rica to the disappearance of species in the southern cloud forests she\u2019d seen, she noticed that there was a wave of extinction traveling down into panama. in 1996, she brought a team of grad students with her to western panama and started recording the amphibian populations, hoping to catch the mysterious disappearance of frogs in its tracks. <\/p>\n lips and her students finally had a breakthrough when they found 50 dead frogs in one area, all of different species. the researchers sent the frogs to a lab that found something in their skin; a chytrid fungus, called batrachochytrium dendrobatidis<\/em> (bd<\/em>).<\/p>\n