One hundred Southern Corroboree frogs—a critically endangered Australian frog species—have returned to their native home in an Australian mountain range known as the Snowy Mountains. Kosciuszko National Park in the Snowy Mountains will establish the new frog population in a purpose-built field enclosure designed to protect and observe the frogs. The enclosure features irrigation systems to prevent bush fires and remote cameras to monitor them. The Southern Corroboree frog population, up until now, was dwindling with an estimated population of just 30 left in the wild. NSW government’s Saving our Species program, National Parks and Wildlife Service, Taronga Conservation Society Australia and Zoos Victoria were all involved in the restoration of the native frog species. “These 100 corroboree frogs have been reintroduced to a purpose-built field enclosure at Kosciuszko National Park that protects them from the disease while allowing them to grow and thrive into the future,” Minister for Environment, James …