• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Female Frogs Fake Their Own Deaths To Avoid Having Sex With Unwanted Males

October 11, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Animal mating strategies and breeding behaviors offer some of the strangest and most impressive feats of nature that can be seen. From singing songs to woo your future mate to helping your mate get undressed, the animal kingdom sets the stage for all kinds of breeding behavior. However, the female frogs of the world have had enough. New research sheds light on female mate avoidance in the European common frog (Rana temporaria) – and it turns out they have a few tricks up their sleeves to avoid getting down and dirty.

Mating can present many adverse outcomes to the individuals involved and can even in some cases lead to the death of the individual. Female European frogs have therefore been found to develop three avoidance behaviors to prevent or stop the unwanted advances of the male frogs. The researchers have named these; rotation, release calls, and tonic immobility – or feigning death.

Advertisement

For those not familiar with the world of frog mating, European common frogs are what are known as explosive breeders. This means large gatherings of males and females occur in the spring, where male frogs will typically climb onto the backs of female frogs in a position known as amplexus. The male frogs will attempt to mate with as many females as possible, which can lead to mating balls of several male frogs all piled on top of one female. This can result in the females drowning as the male frogs cling to the females in the water. 

“It can look disgusting, I have to say,” Dr Carolin Dittrich, from the Natural History Museum of Berlin and lead author of the study, told the New York Times.

Photo of two common brown frogs mating in water as a third frog looks on

Amplexus between a single male and a female can be difficult to escape from but the female has three tactics.

Image credit: Sergey Uryadnikov/Shutterstock.com

Previously, scientists have believed the female frogs to be largely passive to this process – however, the team found that the three avoidance behaviors were more common among the smaller female frogs and that these smaller females were more successful in escaping amplexus. This suggests that the female frogs are much less passive during the explosive breeding phase than previously thought.

Two differently sized females were placed in boxes with a male and observed for a period of one hour. Footage was also recorded of the interactions for the team to analyze. The researchers observed all three avoidance behaviors both singularly and in combination, and found that smaller females used all three tactics more than larger females and had more chance of escaping the male mating attempts. Of the female frogs, 83 percent used the rotation tactic to escape making it the most popular choice, while nearly half of the females (48 percent) used the release calls. These calls are the female frogs mimicking the sounds males make, fooling the males on top of them to release. 

Advertisement

“Males typically use release calls to signal other males that they are a male, so to let them go,” Dittrich told New Scientist. 

Playing dead, or tonic immobility, where the female frogs stiffened their arms and legs happened in 33 percent of the females that were in amplexus by a male, this behavior happened alongside the other tactics of rotation and calling. 

The team suggests that these tactics could be to prove the strength and endurance of a male, leading to better, fitter males who are able to cling on during the rotations passing down their genes to the female’s eggs. However, since the behaviors were more often seen in younger females than older, it could also suggest that these are stress responses to the mating behavior.

The researchers further suggest that studying the stress corticosterone levels in these frogs could shed light on these behaviors and acknowledge that observations that they saw in a box may differ from the proportion of these behaviors in the wild. 

Advertisement

“I think even if we call this species a common frog and think we know it well, there are still aspects we don’t know and perhaps haven’t thought about, ” Dittrich told the Guardian.

The paper is published in Royal Society Open Science.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Paris ramps up security as jihadist attacks trial starts
  2. Cricket-‘Western bloc’ has let Pakistan down, board chief says
  3. Analysis-Diverse boards to pick the next Boston and Dallas Fed bank chiefs
  4. Ancient Bison Found In Permafrost Is So Well Preserved Scientists Want To Clone It

Source Link: Female Frogs Fake Their Own Deaths To Avoid Having Sex With Unwanted Males

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Man Broke Down Wall In His Basement And Discovered An Ancient Underground City That Once Housed 20,000 People
  • Same-Sex Penguin Couple Adopt And Raise Chick – And They’ve All Got 10/10 Names
  • Dolphins May Not “See” With Echolocation, But Instead “Feel” With It
  • Confirmed! Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Indeed An Interstellar Visitor, Quite Different From Its Predecessors
  • At 192, Jonathan – The Oldest Living Land Animal – Has Lived Through 40 US Presidents
  • 300,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools “Made By Denisovans” Discovered In China
  • Why Do Cats Eyes Glow? For The Same Reason Great White Sharks’ Do, Silly
  • G-astronomical News: Michelin-Starred Meal To Be Served On The ISS
  • In 2032, Earth May Witness A Once-In-5,000-Year Event On The Moon
  • Brand New Microscope Designed For Underwater Reveals Stunning Details Of Corals
  • The Atlantic’s Major Circulation Current Is Showing Worrying Signs, But Is Collapse Near?
  • “The Rings Held The Answer”: How We Finally Figured Out Saturn’s Day Length In 2019
  • Mystery Of Leonardo Da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man” Solved By A Dentist And A Protractor
  • Asteroid Ryugu’s Latest Mineral Is As Weird As Finding “A Tropical Seed In The Arctic”
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Are We Living Through A Sixth Mass Extinction?
  • Alien Abduction Or A Trick Of The Mind? A Down To Earth Explanation Of Close Encounters
  • Six Months Into Trump’s Presidency, Americans Report Record Low Pride In Being American
  • TikToker Unknowingly Handles Extremely Venomous Cone Snail And Lives To Tell The Tale
  • Scientists Sequence Oldest Egyptian DNA To Date, From A Whopping 4,800 Years Ago
  • “Uncharted Waters”: Large Hadron Collider Begins Colliding Oxygen For The First Time
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version