Tuesday, December 14, 2010

La Nina coming

The La Nina weather conditions are coming...basically this means wetter/colder conditions then we have been experiencing this past year. The frogs will be on the move and we'll find out just how bad the infestation is. Governor Abercrombie has appointed Senator Russell Kokubun to head the Department of Agriculture which can only give us a better chance at raising the interest in eradicating this invasive spp.

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

A different female

These 5 are all mottled...



Here's a non-typical female coqui with "palomino" type patches on her. This area has a high percentage of the mottled type frogs that don't change skin color even with temperature changes.
The male and 2 other females mottled skin were much more visable until it started to heat up but as you can see the other 2 are still showing the pattern and never change. So....camoflage = better survival rate..= pass on the stronger skin pigment or?? let's get that grant and study it!

Monday, May 24, 2010

Large female

And tennis ball from the dog...


Caught this female tonight and measured her against a quarter then laid out on a ruler.
No eggs yet so she'll get even bigger in the next few weeks.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

County Council Meeting

Attended the CC meeting and met some new folks with new ideas, much needed. Dr. Davis brought in "ACS" or acidified calcium sulfate which has gotten great results from the people using it so keep an ear open for the progress of this as it moves thru. Also met the State Coqui Coordinator, Raymond, who is working with a minimal crew towards keeping the native forest coqui free. People are still in groups using the county sprayers but may lose them to the budget crunch happening everywhere, let's hope they don't give up. Brenda Ford is working towards raising the awareness of the coqui frog issues and keep the public informed.
As stated earlier in this blog California has made the coqui a "restricted" pest and you need a permit to transport it, this is potentially bad news as our shipments pass through their ports and coqui's can survive for months with no food or water. Several areas in CA have established populations now and like us don't have the funds to do a sufficient job in controlling it.
As a side note Waimanalo on Oahu has reported the coqui's getting worse and the map of infestations on that island is growing much as it did here, they need to use more than just citric acid or they'll end up just like the Big Island....
Let's get our States Senior Senators looking at this and perhaps the White House can give us some relief...please.