Osgood's Ethiopian Toad
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Osgood's Ethiopian toad (''Altiphrynoides osgoodi'' formerly known as ''Spinophrynoides osgoodi'') is a possibly extinct species of toad in the family Bufonidae endemic to the mountains of south-central Ethiopia. It was named for the American biologist Wilfred Hudson Osgood who carried out fieldwork in Ethiopia for the
Field Museum The Field Museum of Natural History (FMNH), also known as The Field Museum, is a natural history museum in Chicago, Illinois, and is one of the largest such museums in the world. The museum is popular for the size and quality of its educational ...
in 1926–27. He collected the original specimens of Osgood's Ethiopian toad and three other endemic species of anuran.


Distribution

The toad was common in the Bale Mountains National Park and other montane environments east of the Great Rift Valley, and was also said to be present in an isolated population in the
Gughe Gughe or Guge is a mountain located near the city of Arba Minch, and the Abaya Lake, in Ethiopia. References Mountains of Ethiopia {{Ethiopia-geo-stub ...
Mountains, although the existence of this population was based on a single specimen which may have been misidentified. If the putative population in the Gughe mountains is not included then this toad's total range covered an area of .


Habitat and ecology

Osgood's Ethiopian toad is mainly a species of tropical montane forest, possibly extending marginally into open
moorland Moorland or moor is a type of habitat found in upland areas in temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands and montane grasslands and shrublands biomes, characterised by low-growing vegetation on acidic soils. Moorland, nowadays, generally ...
. There is an observation of these toads breeding in a small pool, which was probably temporary, within a grassy glade surrounded by '' Hypericum'' woodland during April. Long strings of eggs were laid from which the tadpoles hatched.


Conservation

The toad is rare; the last specimen was observed 2003, despite extensive survey work in 2009. If it is still extant, it probably numbers no more than 50 individuals. It is threatened by habitat loss by subsistence exploitation of the forests.
Chytrid Chytridiomycota are a division of zoosporic organisms in the kingdom Fungi, informally known as chytrids. The name is derived from the Ancient Greek ('), meaning "little pot", describing the structure containing unreleased zoöspores. Chytrid ...
fungus is very prevalent in amphibians in highland Ethiopia although there is no data on its impact on this species.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q2212746 osgoodi Amphibians of Ethiopia Endemic fauna of Ethiopia Bale Mountains Fauna of the Ethiopian Highlands Critically endangered fauna of Africa Amphibians described in 1932 Taxonomy articles created by Polbot