• 1: Home
  • 2: Species
    • 2.1: Overview
      • 2.1.4: A. certus
      • 2.1.5: A. chiriquiensis
      • 2.1.6: A. cruciger
      • 2.1.7: A. flavescens
      • 2.1.8: A. franciscus
      • 2.1.9: A. glyphus
      • 2.1.10: A. "Guyana Shield" Sp.
      • 2.1.12: A. limosus
      • 2.1.16: A. oxapampae
      • 2.1.17: A. pulcher
      • 2.1.18: A. reticulatus
      • 2.1.20: A. spumarius
      • 2.1.21: A. sorianoi
      • 2.1.22: A. spurrelli
      • 2.1.23: A. varius
      • 2.1.24: A. zeteki
    • 2.2: Habitat
    • 2.4: Last year observed
    • 2.5: Videogallery
    • 2.6: Documents and Papers
  • 3: News
  • 5: Links
  • 6: About
  • 7: Contact

Atelopus zeteki
Atelopus zeteki - El Valle de Antón, Panamá - Copyright Justin Yeager.


Links

Rana Arlequines - PDF Booklet
www.amphibiaweb.org
www.inibico.org/Projects
www.andigena.org/noticias_atelopus/debut_despedida.asp
www.ranadorada.org
www.dartfrog.tk
www.tropical-experience.nl
IUCN Species Programme
www.dendrobatidae.org
www.globalamphibians.org
www.spatialepidemiology.net/bd
Amphibian Resque and Conservation Project - Panamá
Frog Blog Manchester - Andew Gray
Ex Situ Programs for Atelopus
ARKive - Atelopus species
Atelopus zeteki - Husbandry manual, 2nd Edition

Copyrights

We respect copyrights and we expect you to do the same with our website and all the diffrent authors that have choosen to let us use their material like photos, videos or information.
Please contact us if you want to use something. We are easy, we hope you too....

Thanks

To build the content of this website we recieved alot help and pictures. Special thanks go to  M. Bartelds, R. Stuster and J. Yeager in the start. We would also like to thank; B. Vilette, J. v/d Meulen, G. Benaets, G. Bartelds, E. Twomey, C. Barrio, D. Mejia Vargas, J. Meere, E. La Marca, S. Lötters and alot of more people.

Knowledge

Half of the amount of the world’s amphibian species could vanish within our lifetime, resulting in the single largest mass extinction since the disappearance of the dinosaurs.

New species are still found every year. No one knows how many species we never found until it was to late.

Who?

This website was founded by Dennis Nilsson (Sweden) and Marcus Bartelds (Netherlands) in 2008.
The site is now managed by Dennis Nilsson alone.
Without help from researchers, enthusiasts and volunteers all over the world would not this website exist.
- Helper Wanted! Contact us.