| This box is part of Artoria's Endangered Species
Collection. Artoria will donate 10% of the sales proceeds of the
Endangered Species Collection to three conservation groups:
Rainforest Foundation, Wildlife Conservation Society and Tanzania
Wildlife Fund.
The beautifully colored poison dart frogs are so named because
tribes native to the South American rain forests have long used
the poisonous secretions from their skin to poison their hunting
dart tips. One frog can produce enough poison to treat as many as
50 darts. The brilliant warning colors of these frogs is a signal
to their natural enemies that they should be avoided. Their
natural habitat, the warm, moist rainforest floors in Central and
South America, are fast being destroyed by depletion of the
rainforests. These frogs are among the first to be places on the
endangered species list. Recently, Abbott Labs discovered that
their poison can be used to create a new painkiller, 200 more
times powerful than morphine and non-addictive. It would be a
shame to let these species disappear forever.
This strawberry poison dart frog is climbing up a bamboo stalk.
A nice fat caterpillar is resting on the other side. The clasp is
an insect and there is another insect painted inside. The box is
marked Artoria Peint Main, Limoges France and is signed and
numbered by the artist. It measures 2¼"h x 1"w. |