• 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

Frogs Are Screaming But We Can’t Hear Them

April 6, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The rainforest can be a noisy place to be, so how do you make yourself heard if you end up in trouble? For the clay robber frog, the answer is to give off an almighty scream – but it’s one that we humans can’t naturally hear. However, a team of scientists have now successfully recorded it for the first time.

The use of ultrasound is common in the animal world for communication and echolocation – bats, dolphins, and whales are all known to use it. Frogs can use ultrasound to chatter too, though some researchers suspected that they might employ it to make distress calls as well. 

Advertisement

Now, the screams of the clay robber frog (Haddadus binotatus), a species endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest, have helped to confirm this theory.

To do so, the team had to get the frogs into defense mode. This involved holding the frogs by their back legs, a tried and tested method for simulating an attack by a predator. In response, the frogs raise up the front of their bodies, jerk their heads back and open their mouths wide almost as if preparing themselves, and then partially close their mouths.

illustration of clay robber frog exhibiting distress call behavior

Does this remind anyone else of the “Pop Cat” meme?

Image courtesy of Ubiratã Ferreira Souza, illustration by Lucas Rosado

As recordings revealed on two occasions, this slight closing of the mouth coincided with a high-frequency distress call. Though parts of the calls were between 7 to 20 kilohertz, a frequency that humans can hear, there were also components that went above 20kHz and up to 44 kHz – that’s ultrasound territory, which humans can’t hear.

The defensive positioning of the frogs suggests that the distress call also has a defensive purpose, but exactly how the call is meant to ward off predators is unclear. One possibility is that it scares a whole host of different predatory animals away.

Advertisement



“Some potential predators of amphibians, such as bats, rodents and small primates, are able to emit and hear sounds at this frequency, which humans can’t,” said first author Ubiratã Ferreira Souza in a statement. 

“One of our hypotheses is that the distress call is addressed to some of these, but it could also be the case that the broad frequency band is generalist in the sense that it’s supposed to scare as many predators as possible.”

But screaming their heads off to scare away predators is just one theory. It might also be a call out to the predators of their predators, the researchers suggest.

“Could it be the case that the call is meant to attract an owl that will attack a snake that’s about to eat the frog?” Souza hypothesized.

Advertisement

It’s a question that the team hopes to answer with future research, which they also hope will determine whether there are other species of frogs silently screaming too.

The study is published in the journal acta ethologica.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. ARK Invest’s Wood expects market rotation back to growth stocks
  2. Most Plant-Based Milks Are Poorer In Key Micronutrients Than Dairy
  3. The Physicist And Mathematician Who Claims He Can Beat Roulette
  4. Only 1 Percent Of Chemicals Have Been Discovered – How Can We Find The Rest?

Source Link: Frogs Are Screaming But We Can’t Hear Them

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • These Are The Best Fictional Spaceships, According To Astronauts – What Are Yours?
  • Can I See Comet 3I/ATLAS From Earth During Its Closest Approach Today? Yes, Here’s How
  • The Earliest Winter Solstice Rituals Go All The Way Back To The Stone Age
  • We Were F*&@ing Right – Swearing Is Good For You And Now We Know Why
  • Why Do Wombats Have Square Poop? New Discovery Reveals How Their “Latrines” May Act Like Dating Apps
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Answering Some Of The Biggest Scientific Mysteries Of 2025
  • Astronomers Catch Incredible First Direct Images Of Objects Colliding In Another Star System
  • Billionaire Jared Isaacman Finally Confirmed As Head Of NASA, As Agency Faces Uncertain Future
  • Something Just Crashed Into The Moon – And Astronomers Captured The Whole Event
  • These “Living Rocks” Are Among The Oldest Surviving Life And Are Champion Carbon Dioxide Absorbers
  • Ambitious Iguana “Love Island” For Near-Extinct Reptiles Becomes Epic Conservation Success Story
  • Sol 1,540: NASA Releases Video Of Perseverance Rover’s Record-Breaking Drive On Mars
  • Why Carl Sagan Was Way Ahead Of His Time And The Legacy He Left Behind
  • Why Were Pompeii Victims All Wearing Thick Woolly Cloaks In August?
  • We May Finally Know What Causes These Bizarre Bright Blue Cosmic Flashes
  • What’s The Biggest Rock In The World?
  • There Is A Very Simple Test To See If You Have Aphantasia
  • Bringing Extinct Animals To Life: Is Artificial Intelligence Helping Or Harming Palaeoart?
  • This Brilliant Map Has 3D Models Of Nearly Every Single Building In The World – All 2.75 Billion Of Them
  • These Hognose Snakes Have The Most Dramatic Defense Technique You’ve Ever Seen
  • 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