| In 2014  The Zoological Survey of India in their publication titled “Threatened  Amphibians of India” pointed out that more than 20% of frogs and toads (78 of  the 340 species) found in India were under threat. They were very sensitive to  habitat and climate change and were therefore bio-indicators – their presence/absence  indicated the state of the environment. Incidentally,  there is little difference between frogs and toads except that toads have warts  on their bodies and mainly live on land, whereas frogs prefer water.
 Beauty  Without Cruelty has heard of frogs’ legs being served all year round at certain  big restaurants of Goa who stockpile them in their freezers by purchasing live  frogs or frogs’ legs from village youth for amounts ranging from Rs 75 to 250  each. Frog meat is called “jumping chicken” in Goa. Venison, porcupine and wild  boar are also illegally served with feni,  the local liquor. In many parts of India, including Mumbai, battered and fried  frogs’ legs are considered an exotic food.
 The  species that are poached are the Indian Bullfrog, Jerdon Bullfrog, Indian Pond  Frog, Grass Frog and some times the Common Indian Toad. Under the Wildlife  (Protection) Act, 1972, any individual or restaurant detected to be catching,  killing, selling, serving or even eating frog meat attracts stringent  punishment with a fine of Rs 25,000/- and/or imprisonment up to 3 years.
 Instead  of going all out to implement this law, in 2015 the Goa Forest Department  issued an advisory that eating frog meat could lead to illnesses ranging from  cancer to kidney failure to paralytic strokes due to their bodies being full of  agrochemicals used liberally in fields. This is so because their skin is  permeable and they breathe through it. Toxins, chemicals and fertilisers can  easily get absorbed into their bodies.
 
 In June 2019 it was reported that the  demand for frog meat or “jumping chicken” (curried frog legs) in Goa was posing  a severe threat to the Indian Bullfrog in adjoining Uttara Kannada district.  During monsoon frogs were being hunted by gangs in the wetlands along Bhatkal  and smuggled into Goa.
    The  authorities and NGOs have launched a Save Frogs campaign to highlight the  importance of the frog in the ecosystem. They say that with a torch in one hand  and a bag in the other, poachers slosh around marshy fields and open areas  sodden with rain, hunting for frogs. Believe it or not, the majority of  poachers are white-collar workers opting to hunt frogs at night. Eating  frogs’ legs (different species) has resulted in mosquito populations to surge.  For example, there was a time when up to 30 species of frogs were seen in the coastal  Karwar region, but now it’s rare to see any frogs. A single frog can eat up to  100 mosquitoes a night including those that carry malaria, dengue and  chikungunya fevers.
 In  Kerala, frogs’ legs are also considered a delicacy, mainly fried, or made into  a curry, and served by the innumerable kallu (toddy) and arrack (liquor  or wine which is distilled) shops particularly in central parts of the state.
 Surprisingly,  there exists a Kerala Frog Catchers’ Association in the state. Teams of 4 to 5  persons move out in the dark armed with sacks and petromax lamps. The frogs are  effectively stunned by the bright light so can be easily picked up and thrown  into the sacks and carried away. Their hind legs are then amputated and the  severed bodies dumped as waste for scavenger birds. They have even been catching  frogs from neighbouring Tamil Nadu and Karnataka during the monsoon breeding  season.
 Frogs,  eels, snails and crickets are sold alongside shellfish and grubs and served  (eels live and slithering) in restaurants at Dimapur in Nagaland and are  popular during the state’s annual Hornbill Festival in December.
 Sikkim’s  Lepchas community strongly believe that eating frogs can cure stomach ailments. This apart, frogs’ legs is a popular dish among the Sikkimese.
 
 Just before monsoon 2020, BWC alerted  the governments of Goa, Karnataka and Kerala about poaching of frogs. We pointed  out that a fall in frog populations had given rise to mosquitoes and that eating  wild species was unadvisable in view of current the COVID-19 situation. Replies  from several forest divisions of Karnataka stated that although no illegal  hunting and trading of frogs was found, a strict vigil would be kept by their  field staff. Similarly BWC wrote to the Sikkim  and requested them to launch a campaign against trapping, selling, serving and  eating frogs’ legs which were known as “jumping chicken” there too, and take  strict and immediate action against the culprits so others were stalled in  committing the same crime.
 
 Last but not least, the University of  Uppsala (Sweden) has found that linuron, a potato herbicide, harms frogs by  reducing male fertility and making more tadpoles female. This is in addition to  the well documented devastation pesticides have caused to insect populations  that are consumed by frogs.
 In 2019 researchers of ATREE stated  that an increasing number of deformed frogs like those with missing limbs and  eyes were being found in different parts of India. The reasons could be  pollution, or may be the pesticides used in paddy fields where a large  percentage of frogs and born.
 
 Meanwhile, the least we can do is to appreciate frogs  by creating awareness on the World Frog Day which falls on 20 March.
 
 Frogs  Exploited In 2020 scientists  from the Center for Regenerative & Developmental Biology at Tufts  University (USA) created the world’s first Xenobots or “living machines” – tiny  robots built from the cells of the African clawed frog that can move around on  their own. They repurposed living cells scraped from frog embryos and assembled  them into entirely new life-forms. In other words disgustingly Man played God.
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