A chief rationale for this plan is protection of the California red-legged frog, also an endangered species.
The northern red-legged frog has long, powerful legs well adapted to jumping.
R. draytonii looks very similar to the northern red-legged frog.
This is the habitat of the California red-legged frog, very endangered.
The California red-legged frog may aestivate to conserve energy when its food and water supply is low.
The red-legged frog requires stream side, woodland environments for survival.
It was formerly considered a subspecies of the northern red-legged frog (R. aurora).
The wilderness includes the creeks and canyons that are habitat for the endangered red-legged frog.
The red-legged frog is further subdivided into two categories:
Biologists found a dime-size white flower, thought to be extinct, and a colony of endangered red-legged frogs.