Woman arrested with 130 poisonous frogs in her luggage

Bogota Environment Secretary Photo released by theBogota Environment Secretary
The colourful frogs were transported inside small plastic film canisters

A woman has been charged with wildlife trafficking after Colombian police found 130 poisonous frogs in her luggage at Bogotá airport on Monday.

The animals were discovered in small film canisters and were dehydrated and stressed, officials said.

The Brazilian woman, who was headed to São Paulo via Panama, said she had been given the frogs as a gift from a local community in southern Colombia.

Local police said the amphibians can fetch up to $1,000 (£780) each.

Bogotá Environment Secretary Adriana Soto said the fine for being in possession of on of these frogs could reach 56 million pesos ($14,300; £11,300).

Bogota Environment Secretary A gloved hand holding a very small, red and blue frogBogota Environment Secretary
These frogs have a range of colour patterns often in red, green, blue, yellow, black and brown

Harlequin frogs, also known as poison-dart frogs (Oophaga histrionica), measure less than the size of a human thumb.

Their skin glands produce a highly toxic poison which has in the past been used by indigenous people to coat the tips of the darts they use for hunting. It is strong enough to kill small animals.

Harlequin frogs are a critically endangered species which can be found in humid forests along the Pacific coast between Ecuador and Colombia, and in other countries in Central and South America.

Their endangered status makes them highly sought-after by private collectors in international markets, according to local police.

Wildlife trafficking is common in Colombia and across Latin America, a region rich in biodiversity. Amphibians, small mammals and marine animal parts, such as those of sharks, are particularly popular with traffickers.

Bogota Environment Secretary Workers look through a box of small film canistersBogota Environment Secretary
Workers seized a number of plastic canisters which housed the frogs