Fungus is wiping out frogs. These tiny saunas could save them.

Our purpose-built "frog saunas" allow amphibians to warm up in winter and bake off chytrid infections. You can even DIY and build a frog sauna for your own backyard with our step-by-step guide.

A picture of three frogs sitting in little holes in a concrete "frog sauna"
(Image credit: Anthony Waddle)

All over the world, frogs are being wiped out by the chytrid fungus. At least 500 species have declined, including as many as 90 species now presumed extinct.

This catastrophic and ongoing biodiversity loss surpasses the devastation wrought by other notorious invasive species such as cats, rats and even cane toads. Short of removing species from the wild and treating them in captivity, few strategies exist to deal with the chytrid threat.

Anthony Waddle
Schmidt Science Fellow in Conservation Biology, Macquarie University

Anthony Waddle is a conservation biologist who works on a disease that kills frogs called chytrid. His research includes vaccine development, creating habitat that protects frogs from disease and using gene-editing to improve frog resistance.