Tim has worked closely with FFI since 1999. He has edited &FFI (formerly Fauna & Flora magazine) since its inception in 2001 and is the author of With Honourable Intent - A Natural History of Fauna & Flora International, published in 2017.
The survival prospects of one of the world’s most threatened and evolutionarily distinct amphibians have just received an enormous boost in the shape of a new community-based protected area in Ghana.
The scientific justification for the creation of this crucially important sanctuary – formally gazetted by the government in September 2018 – was based largely upon the findings of a team of Ghanaian biologists whose research on the evocatively named Togo slippery frog was supported by the Conservation Leadership Programme (CLP).
The 350-hectare Onepone (pronounced oh-nay-poh-nay) Endangered Species Refuge, named in honour of the two communities who donated land to enable its creation, will safeguard one of the last remaining forest fragments in the so-called Dahomey Gap – the savannah corridor that separates the Upper and Lower Guinean forests. Between them, these two vast blocks of West African rainforest comprise one of the world’s most valuable – and imperilled – havens of biodiversity, home to more than a quarter of the continent’s mammal species and countless other plants and animals.
View of the Togo-Volta Highlands, last refuge of the critically endangered Togo slippery frog. Credit: Caleb Ofori-Boateng
The islands of remnant forest dotted throughout this swathe of savannah harbour species that are found nowhere else on the planet, including the critically endangered Togo slippery frog. A close relative of the more familiar goliath frog – famed as the world’s largest – the Togo slippery frog is now believed to be restricted to the Togo-Volta Highlands, the forested hills that straddle the border between Ghana and Togo.
It was here, in 2013, that Dr Caleb Ofori-Boateng and his CLP-funded project team embarked on a multi-pronged conservation effort to rescue this neglected and extremely rare amphibian from the brink of extinction. At this point, Caleb and his fellow frog enthusiasts were operating under the collective banner of Herp-Ghana. This organisation began life in 2006 as a small conservation interest group at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, but has since metamorphosed into a leading Ghanaian NGO that spearheads the conservation of amphibians and reptiles throughout West Africa.
The team’s earlier CLP project, funded by a 2010 Future Conservationist Award, had focused on what was then considered to be the only viable population of the Togo slippery frog – in Ghana’s Atewa Mountains – which was threatened by habitat destruction as a result of bauxite mining, but recent research has revealed that this is almost certainly a completely different species.
Caleb Ofori-Boateng conducting a forest survey. Credit: Caleb Ofori-Boateng
Three years later, with the help of a CLP Follow-up Award, Caleb and his team switched their attention to the Togo-Volta Highlands, where this slippery frog was on a slippery slope, thanks to a perfect storm of rapidly expanding human settlements, widespread logging, slash-and-burn agriculture and a roaring trade in bushmeat.
With CLP support, the award-winning team devised and implemented a suite of conservation measures that included a comprehensive species status review, targeted habitat restoration, training of local conservationists, provision of livelihood alternatives, and an awareness campaign aimed at transforming local attitudes towards an amphibian that was previously perceived as a protein snack. Crucially, by engaging with a broad range of stakeholders – and with local communities in particular – Caleb and his colleagues played a pivotal role in building widespread support for the creation of the new protected area.
Eliciting support local community support for the new reserve. Credit: Caleb Ofori-Boateng
The Togo slippery frog is just one of numerous threatened species that stand to benefit from the increased protection afforded by the newly designated reserve. Other species that share its dwindling forest habitat include the critically endangered hooded vulture, the endangered Ukami reed frog, the beleaguered black-bellied and white-bellied pangolins – victims of the rocketing demand for their scales in traditional Chinese medicine – and a veritable kaleidoscope of endemic butterflies.
“It is a joy to see that so many species will now be saved alongside the slippery frog, thanks to this new reserve,” said Caleb. “The establishment of this new protected area is evidence that our conversation campaigns begun years ago with the support of CLP are finally bearing fruit.”
CLP’s Executive Manager Stuart Paterson, who has followed this team’s progress with great interest since 2010, expressed his delight at the news: “After eight years of sustained work by this committed team, it is excellent to see that the area of land donated by the local community to protect Togo slippery frogs has expanded and received official recognition. Through perseverance and gaining support from a range of stakeholders – including, most importantly, local people – the team has made a big difference to the survival chances of this critically endangered frog.”
Togo slippery frog clinging to a rock in a forest stream. Credit: Caleb Ofori-Boateng
The Conservation Leadership Programme (CLP) is a partnership comprising three leading international conservation organisations – Fauna & Flora International (FFI), BirdLife International and the Wildlife Conservation Society. For over 30 years, CLP has been at the forefront of efforts to identify, support and nurture the most talented and promising early-career conservationists in developing countries, building the leadership skills of those who are striving to overcome major threats to nature in places where capacity and access to resources are limited.