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cleverusername's avatar
13 years ago

Froggy's Lament Hyper Arcade Edition BYE BYE Froggy

Would like to see this rifted, since the real froggy will be dead soon, so that we can remember froggy :(





A study released Wednesday said that North American frogs, toads and other amphibious animals are disappearing so quickly that they are on track to be extinct from their natural habitats by 2033. According to the Denver Post, the study — which was conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey — said that these types of animal populations are disappearing at a rate of 3.7 percent per year, although certain threatened species are expected to be extinct from their natural habitats within 6 years.

The researchers found that amphibian species are even rapidly declining in protected areas. Biologist Erin Muths of Ft. Collins, Colorado told the Post, “Even in what we consider pristine areas, we are seeing amphibian decline. If anything is doing poorly in an area we think is protected, that says something about our level of protection and about what may be happening outside those areas.”

The USGS study did not delve into the causes of the species’ shrinking numbers, but a report published by Oregon State University in 2011 titled “Catastrophic amphibian declines have multiple causes, no simple solution” said that a plethora of factors could be to blame.

“The amphibian declines are linked to natural forces such as competition, predation, reproduction and disease, as well as human-induced stresses such as habitat destruction, environmental contamination, invasive species and climate change,” reads the report.

OSU zoologist Andrew Blaustein said, “With a permeable skin and exposure to both aquatic and terrestrial problems, amphibians face a double whammy. Because of this, mammals, fish and birds have not experienced population impacts as severely as amphibians – at least, not yet.”

1 Reply

  • YEA I agree. I was thinking something similar for my first demo.

    I was thinking a chicken crossing the road game... with cameras rendered on opposite sides of the head like a chicken's eyes are positioned. One would have to keep moving one's head back and forth like a chicken does when it walks and looks around... and inevitably end up walking a zig zaggy path. That'd be some major motion sickness for probably everyone.

    Here's a video of a unity demo i mocked up real quick while typing this response. looks real huh :shock: