The Endangered Leopard Frog That Lives Next to an NYC Amazon Warehouse

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New York|The Endangered Frog That Lives Next to an Amazon Warehouse

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/03/nyregion/frog-atlantic-coast-leopard-endangered.html

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The Atlantic Coast leopard frog, first identified in an industrial section of Staten Island in 2012, is now on the state’s endangered species list. Conservation groups see an opportunity.

A brownish frog with lighter-colored stripes pokes its head out of a murky pond amid sticks and leaves.
The Atlantic Coast leopard frog looks a lot like some more common amphibians native to New York City, but its quack-like mating call helps set it apart.Credit...Ellen Pehek

By Aaron Short

Reporting from Staten Island, N.Y.

Sept. 3, 2025Updated 5:32 a.m. ET

On a Sunday evening in late April, Ellen Pehek pushed apart a thicket of tall reeds at the edge of a murky Staten Island pond, searching for one of New York City’s rarest animals.

The pond, in a marshy area along an access road near a cluster of Amazon and IKEA warehouses, didn’t look like anything special. But Dr. Pehek, a retired city parks department ecologist, felt confident that the Atlantic Coast leopard frog was nearby.

“That’s where I’ve seen them before,” she said. “We found roadkill on the road right near there, and I know we caught tadpoles in the pond in the past.”

Few people would associate this desolate section of the borough’s West Shore with rare amphibians. But Staten Island is one of just three counties in New York where the Atlantic Coast leopard frog, a species identified less than 15 years ago, is known to live. This spring, the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation added the frog to its endangered species list — the first addition of a New York City resident since 1999. The designation, coming as the federal Environmental Protection Agency was seeking to weaken habitat protections nationwide, galvanized efforts to protect the frog’s habitat from further encroachment.

As the sun retreated behind the Goethals Bridge, Dr. Pehek crouched in her thigh-high rubberized muck boots and orange insulated jacket, listening.

Image

Ellen Pehek, a retired ecologist for the New York City parks department, said the number of Atlantic Coast leopard frogs on Staten Island has declined significantly since it was discovered.Credit...Christian Rodriguez for The New York Times

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