preview

Essay about The Mysterious Vanishing Frogs of North America

Better Essays

The Mysterious Vanishing Frogs of North America

I have a passion for all things slimy, wet, and creepy-crawly. Some of the best times of my life have been spent on my knees, digging in the dirt for earthworms, traipsing back from ponds with buckets of putrid swamp water teeming with tadpoles, or chasing fat little toads in knee-high grass. I love the outdoors and all of the ugly animals that inhabit it. I like to catch them, watch them, and – especially – photograph them. For the longest time, lizards have been the main focus of my photographic endeavors, but last summer, inspired by a book on frogs from the local library, I set out to document the lives of these often overlooked amphibians. I live in southern Florida near the …show more content…

The facts and science behind declining frog populations will be discussed shortly, but almost as interesting as the facts themselves is how the story was reported in the media, and how the reporting influenced the nation’s thinking on frogs.

The frenzy over deformed frogs began on a lazy summer day in August 1995. Cindy Reinitz, a teacher at a school in Henderson, Minnesota, was walking with her middle school students down a deserted, dusty back road on the way to a field trip at a local farm. Along the way, the kids began to chase frogs along the side of the road. When one of the kids showed her a frog with a missing leg, her first instinct was that one of her less than angelic students had pulled the leg off. However, a closer examination of the frog showed no fresh wound, and when she and her middle schoolers set out to capture more frogs, they noticed that a large number of the frogs were missing legs, had more than two legs, or were deformed in some other way (Souder, 1).

The frog story had all of the elements that make a newspaper reporter’s ears perk up: children – to provide excellent visuals and add just the right amount of “cute” factor, a defenseless victim – the frogs, an ultimate evil – pollution, and a possible danger to everyone – the frogs could ostensibly be “canaries in a mineshaft” (idea from Reaser & Johnson, 3). By 1997, an alarming number of newspaper articles had been written

Get Access