"Snot Otter" Sperm to Save Giant Salamander? Cryopreservation may be the last chance for the hellbender, aka the snot otter. North America's biggest salamanders, hellbenders can grow as long as 2.5 feet (0.7 meter) (file photo). Photograph by Joel Sartore, National Geographic - Hellbender sperm-cell tail, with characteristic "corkscrew" tissue. Photograph courtesy Dalen Agnew. It may be a shot in the dark, but freezing sperm is one of the last chances to save the hellbender, North America's biggest salamander, conservationists say. Hellbenders—also known as snot otters and devil dogs—have dwindled throughout theirrange, which once encompassed streams from northeastern Arkansas toNew York.
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8/9/2019 Snot Otter
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"Snot Otter" Sperm to Save Giant Salamander?
Cryopreservation may be the last chance for the hellbender, aka the snot otter.
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North America's biggest salamanders, hellbenders can grow as long as 2.5 feet (0.7 meter) (file photo).
Hellbenders—also known as snot otters and devil dogs—have dwindled throughout their range, which once encompassed streams from northeasternArkansas to New York.
The 2.5-foot-long (0.7-meter-long) amphibians have declined by 80 to 90 percent in most
of their traditional watersheds in recent decades, and now haunt only isolated pockets of
southern Appalachia (see map), said Dale McGinnity, curator of reptiles at NashvilleZoo.
All of the states in the hellbender's range have listed the animal as a "species of special
concern," and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is currently reviewing whether to addthe hellbender to the federal endangered species list, McGinnity said.
The reasons for their decline is unknown, but it's likely environmental contaminants such
as pesticides are harming the creatures via their highly permeable skin, he said.
To make matters worse, hellbenders don't seem to be breeding at all in the wild, he said, possibly because human-made pollutants containing synthetic hormones are damaging
the amphibians' reproductive systems.
As a result, there are apparently no young wild hellbenders in existence, only agedindividuals—the amphibians likely live between 30 and 80 years, McGinnity said.
The hellbender's decline spurred an international team to collect sperm from some captive
salamanders in September 2009 for cryopreservation, a common zoo practice that freezessperm without damaging its cell membranes.
Though several zoos have put a "great deal of effort" into breeding the amphibians in
captivity, none has been particularly successful, McGinnity added. It's unclear whythey're tough to breed, but it may be that it's hard to replicate the exact temperatures of
their home streams.
"For the first time, sperm was collected from a living salamander, cryopreserved, and
brought back to life," said McGinnity, who is involved in the sperm-preservation effortwith colleagues from Belgium's Antwerp Zoo and Michigan State University.