B.C. frog relocation project aims to better understand conservation practice

Almost every day this summer, University of British Columbia master's student Megan Winand waded through wetlands with an antenna, following the beeping sounds to find Columbia spotted frogs.
Winand is one of the first to study the impacts of mitigation translocation, or the movement of animals from one location to “the next available habitat that is of the same or better value than where they came from.”
It is typically done as a conservation effort during construction or development projects, she explained.
The practice gained attention ahead of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and Whistler, when the Sea-to-Sky Highway was upgraded and more than 1,000 amphibians were carefully moved out of the construction zone. Among those animals was the red-legged frog, which is listed as a “species of special concern” in B.C.
Frogs are important because they are an “indicator species,” said Winand.
“They act as the canary in the coal mine, if you will. If the frog isn't doing well, because it's taking in whatever pollutants are from the air or the wetland itself, it's likely because the ecosystem isn't doing well.”
She also noted they are also “in the middle of the food web,” serving as a tasty snack for some animals, while feasting on lower-ranked species like insects and acting as a natural “bio control.”
Mitigation translocation has become increasingly more common in B.C. since the Sea to Sky project, but its impacts have been little studied, Winand explained.
“We don't know a lot about the effectiveness of this,” she said. “We don't really know what happens to them after we move them, and even globally there's not a lot of published research around this type of translocation.”
That's where her project began at the Mayook Wetland near Cranbrook, in southeastern B.C.
She spent the spring and summer using radio trackers and transponder tags that fit like tiny backpacks on the frogs to track their movements.
“What we're doing is we're capturing Columbia spotted frogs at this wetland and all of them are getting what's called a PIT tag, a passive integrated transponder tag,” she explained.
“Simply, it's like giving your pet a microchip. There's no battery in it. When you wave this wand over top of it, it gives you a series of numbers that are unique to that frog.”
The frogs were then divided into three groups, Winand said. Either she left them in their original habitat, which served as her control group, moved them a short distance of about one kilometre or relocated them a farther distance of about five kilometres.
Then, over the summer months, she documented their movement and recorded their measurements, including their weight and size.
“I just want to see if they're growing, how they're doing. I want to see if they're in the same spot that I originally captured them or if they moved. All that kind of adds into my questions about movement and survival.”
The two-year endeavour is in partnership with Ducks Unlimited Canada and the B.C. Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship.
The project officially began in April, when she and research assistants began tagging frogs. Her field work continued throughout the summer, before concluding in August. Now, Winand is analyzing the field data.
While she said it's too soon to predict the results, she hopes it begins to answer some of the ongoing questions about the “under researched” topic of translocation mitigation.
“My project is really just like the tip of a very large iceberg in understanding this topic. I'm just looking simply at survival and movement,” she said.
Once those basic questions are answered, Winand said researchers can begin to tackle harder ones, like the impacts such movement has on resource and food competition, disease and genetics.
“There's still a lot to understand and I hope that this will just keep the momentum going for more people to invest in understanding this research topic.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 23, 2023.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Conservatives launch marathon voting session over Liberal refusal to scrap carbon tax
Pierre Poilievre's Conservatives have launched what could become an overnight marathon voting session in the House of Commons, after signalling they'd be making good on their threat to delay the government's agenda over their opposition to the carbon tax.
Two charged with murder of Quebecer Daniel Langlois and partner in Dominica
The director of public prosecutions in the Caribbean nation of Dominica has confirmed that two men have been charged in the death of Quebecer Daniel Langlois and his partner.
Death toll rises to five in cantaloupe salmonella outbreak, as cases almost double
The Public Health Agency of Canada says the death toll has risen to five in a salmonella outbreak linked to Malichita and Rudy brand cantaloupes.
Hunter Biden indicted on nine tax charges, adding to gun charges in special counsel probe
Hunter Biden was indicted on nine tax charges in California on Thursday as a special counsel investigation into the business dealings of President Joe Biden's son intensifies against the backdrop of the looming 2024 election.
Ottawa announces $5.5M for health worker well-being and foreign medical grads
Ottawa has announced nearly $5.5 million in new funding to address health worker well-being and speed up the application process for international medical graduates who want to work in Canada.
UNLV shooting suspect had list of targets at that campus and another university, police say
The suspect in the deadly shooting at the University of Las Vegas, Nevada, had a list of targets at the school and at East Carolina University in North Carolina, police said Thursday.
Canada doubling cost-of-living requirement for international students
Canada will more than double the cost-of-living financial requirement for incoming international students on Jan. 1, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller announced today.
'The Brick' is at the centre of our galaxy. An unexpected new finding may help unlock its mysteries
A box-shaped cloud of opaque dust that lies at the centre of our galaxy has long perplexed scientists, and observations that reveal a new detail about its composition are deepening the mystery — possibly upending what’s known about how stars form.
Flight safety in Canada is plummeting, a confidential UN agency report finds
A draft report from a United Nations agency gives Canada a C grade on flight safety and oversight, down from an A+ and far below most of its peers.