With
Frogs, Who Needs Dengvaxia?
By Michael A. Bengwayan, Ph.D. Environmental
Resource Mgm’t
Earth Times
Earth Times
Humans
never learn. All
of nature by God’s design is medicine. But we chose to kill
our frogs with pesticides then make some 800,000 children as guinea pigs. All
for sake of money.
For
that the Philippines is faced by a
nightmare from a medicine called Dengvaxia, falsely trumpeted by its past leaders as a
silver bullet against dengue.
Today,
Dignay (not his real name) and twelve other children are dead. All took the
questionable vaccine. The fate of thousands of children more hangs in the
balance.
But who needs Dengvaxi when we have frogs?
Vanishing Frogs
Vanishing Frogs
Unfortunately,
frogs, the best defense against mosquitoes, are struggling to stay alive in
this world.
Dengue is a tropical disease caused by a
virus of the mosquito Aedes Aegypti These mosquitos were traditionally
controlled by frogs.
As rains hover, and the temperature is going up, dengue once again rears its ugly head[E1] . The carrier of the deadly virus, Aedes egypti, is multiplying by the millions; and scientists and local communities, racing against time, want to turn back to frogs for help after man-made medicine is failing.
Saving the Frogs an Uphill Climb
“Many
communities now realize they have to be a part of nature and not apart from it
to exist today given all the diseases and ailments that are occurring,” Dr.
Grace Taguba Bengwayan, BSU professor told this autho while observing the large
crowd that participated in the International Save the Frogs Day.
“But
it will be a long fight to bring back the once-plentiful frog population,” she
lamented.
Her
statement stems from another scientist’s discovery that not only frogs but all
the amphibian population in the Philippines is on the verge of being wiped out.
Philippines’
amphibian specialist, Dr. Letecia
Afuang, said the Philippine amphibian population have drastically gone down in
the past twenty years.
Afuang, a professor at the University of the Philippines at Los Banos (UPLB) and in charge of the assessment of conservation status of Philippines amphibians said that there is a lack of awareness in the broader Filipino community of Philippines amphibians and their relevance, leading to the destruction of the creatures.
Afuang, a professor at the University of the Philippines at Los Banos (UPLB) and in charge of the assessment of conservation status of Philippines amphibians said that there is a lack of awareness in the broader Filipino community of Philippines amphibians and their relevance, leading to the destruction of the creatures.
She noted
with approval the efforts being launched by BSU and the communities around it
in saving the frogs, but equally warned there is grave danger of an outbreak of
diseases in other places in the Philippines where many amphibians and reptiles
are becoming extinct.
This is because the population of disease-transmitting insects and vectors is increasing and spreading while their traditional predators are dwindling in number.
“As a result, mosquitoes, including the malaria-transmitting Anopheles and the deadly dengue-causing Aedes Aegypti, are multiplying in great numbers further endangering the health of thousands of not only Filipinos but Asians,” Afuang said.
This is because the population of disease-transmitting insects and vectors is increasing and spreading while their traditional predators are dwindling in number.
“As a result, mosquitoes, including the malaria-transmitting Anopheles and the deadly dengue-causing Aedes Aegypti, are multiplying in great numbers further endangering the health of thousands of not only Filipinos but Asians,” Afuang said.
Bengwayan
and Afuang believe bringing back the frogs which used to abound in the land
with the communities’ help.
Dr.
Luciana Villanueva, former BSU’s vice president for research and extension
pointed out to this author, “We have no other recourse but to turn back to
nature for help. The frogs are our most effective allies in the fight against
the fearsome Aedes egypti mosquito.”
“We
are rallying communities not to kill the frogs by not using insecticides for
the fourth successive year and positive results are showing,” she added.
Villanueva
informed that BSU team encourage locals to make ponds for frogs to naturally
set in. They are also distributing pairs of male and female frogs to farmers
and hobbyists.
Villanueva
led scientists, community leaders, citizens and students last April 30 to
celebrate and strengthen the annual International Save the Frogs Day which
coincided with Earth Day.
BSU
has set up a very large frog pond to increase frog population. “The population
of frogs in the Philippines has decreased because of pesticides that destroyed
large tracts of frog habitat”, she stressed.
“It
must be brought back by urging communities to care for the remaining frogs,
maintain a clean environment and through the passage and implementation of
strict frog conservation laws,” Villanueva hoped as many students exhibited
several ways in saving the frogs through posters, essays, poems, slogans, video
and graphic illustrations..
Global
Warming Increase Mosquitoes and Kills Amphibians
The highly
proactive environmental NGO Cordillera
Ecological Center (CEC) based in the province on the other hand said through a
statement released on Earth Day last year that the issue of Aedes egypti
mosquito population increasing is due to global warming and death of its
natural enemies..
CEC stated “Dengue
epidemic in the Philippines occur annually in the later half of the year
following onset of rainfall and increasing temperature. It becomes more pronounced on El Niño
periods.”
“It is then important to have a moving average temperature
(MAT) index yearly so that it becomes a signal or early warning device to the
public that dengue will not only be a
possibility but will be widespread in
nature,” CEC explained.
“Unfortunately, the rapid rise of Aedes egypti’s
population is being aggravated by the disappearance of many mosaquito predators
like frogs, lizards, spiders, salamanders
and other beneficial small wildlife, “ CEC said.
The CEC won the World Bank Environmental Award in 2008 for
being able to determine the onset and spread of dengue-carrying mosquitoes by
studying temperature increases.
“The rise of
temperature favors disease-carrying insects while equally threatening
beneficial small wildlife like amphibians and reptiles that prey on insect
pests. For instance, four frogs are now extinct in the country. Global warming and
chemicals have destroyed their habitats,” CEC emphasized.
The Declining Amphibian Population Task Force (DAPTF)
of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) supports CEC’s
revelation, saying ionizing radiation of ultraviolet B resulting from ozone
layer depletion has something to do with the decline of amphibian population.
The decline of amphibian population worldwide, is overly evident in the
Philippines. IUCN named the Philippines
as one of the world’s top twenty biodiversity hotspots because of numerous
extinct and vanishing living species.
And if the frogs aren’t saved, they may just end up in
the long list of IUCN’s Red Handbook of extinct animals.
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