In the last 10 years there is a marked increase in the swamp size as well as overgrowing with
bulrush (
Typha sp.). This is due to a prolonged leakage from the pipes of the local water and sanitation facility and has a pronounced negative effect on the frogs, which need open water in order to breed. This leakage has probably influenced the water regime of the swamp, changing it from a temporary pond into a permanent one (with better conditions for the bulrush). The progressive growth of the bulrush will probably lead to another change, with the entire swamp drying off. This would mean that in the following years the local common frog population will lose its main breeding site, and the unique migration will cease. This threat would also affect all other amphibian and reptile species in the protected area. Another significant threat to the frogs is the mass mortality on the asphalt road running along the north-eastern bank of the swamp. Migrating frogs that come from the river must cross the road to reach the swamp (except the few individuals that pass through the drainage pipe under the road). Vehicle traffic is not intensive, but nevertheless during the breeding season, the road is covered with ran-over dead frogs. In 2017 the municipality of
Botevgrad, together with zoologists from the
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, undertook a series of measures aimed at overcoming these threats by uprooting the bulrush and safe-proofing the road with animal passage pipes. ==See also==