EU found responsible for extinction domino effect on frog populations

Leading author Dr. Auliya of the Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change in Bonn, Germany, outlines the manifold uncertainties underlying this : "The international trade in frogs' is a black box, whether it is the lack of -specific trade data, which would be needed to ensure sustainability, or the large-scale mislabeling in trade and the challenges to identify species when it comes to processed, skinned and frozen frogs' legs."

Frogs have a central role in the ecosystem as insect predators—and where frogs disappear, the use of toxic pesticides increases. Hence, the frogs' legs trade has direct consequences not only for the frogs themselves, but for biodiversity and ecosystem health as a whole. The extent to which in frogs' legs are traded internationally remains unclear.

In the 1970s and 1980s, India and Bangladesh were the top suppliers of frogs' legs to Europe, but when their wild populations collapsed, both countries banned exports. Since then, Indonesia has taken over as the largest supplier. In the Southeast Asian country, as now also in Turkey and Albania, large-legged frog species are dwindling in the wild, one after the other, causing a fatal domino effect for species conservation. This increasingly threatens frog populations in the supplier countries.

Limnonectes blythii species complex from a large-scale collector in North Sumatra. Credit: Mark Auliya

Frozen frogs' legs on sale in a French supermarket, August 2022. Credit: Sandra Altherr / Pro Wildlife

Frogs' legs from large ranids at a large-scale reptile collector in North Sumatra, Indonesia. Credit: Mark Auliya