• 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

Tiny Frogs In G-Strings Reveal Insights Into Amphibian Rainforest Navigation

June 23, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Poison frogs are famous for a lot of things: intense bright colors, tadpole cannibalism, and of course the toxins they secrete through their skin. Wearing teeny tiny trackable frog pants, however, hasn’t been one of them – until now.

To explore how males and females of three different species of poison frog are using their spatial skills, researchers from Stanford University came up with an unusual method of tracking the brightly colored amphibians across the rainforest floor. In French Guiana and Ecuador, male and female poison frogs were fitted with “frog pants”, each connected to a radio tracker, to allow the team to monitor the frogs’ navigation.

Advertisement

“In many mammals, males move more and have better-developed spatial skills,” explained Lauren O’Connell, study co-lead and assistant professor of biology in the School of Humanities and Sciences, in a statement.

There are two competing theories about why males might have better spatial skills. The first is that it is an adaptive trait related to the fact that males have different mating strategies than females. The second idea is called the androgen spillover hypothesis, and suggests that males having better spatial skills is a side-effect of having higher levels of androgens, which are the sex hormones that include testosterone. Until now, these two ideas had not been tested in non-mammals in the wild. 

The three species that were chosen, the brilliant-thighed poison frog, the dyeing poison frog and the diablito poison frog, were selected because they all have different methods of parental care. But tracking a tiny frog through the rainforest isn’t easy, which is where frog pants come in. 

“Miniature tracking tags have been used on amphibians and other animals before but tracking tiny mobile frogs in the rainforest required reimagining the tag design and the tracking methods,” said Andrius Pašukonis, postdoctoral scholar in O’Connell’s lab and inventor of the frog pants. “One of the biggest challenges has been designing and perfecting a frog harness that can fit a frog as small as two centimeters (less than an inch)!”

Frog on the rainforest floor wearing a tiny radio tracker

Not just stylish, this tracker helps the team monitor the frog’s navigation.

Image courtesy of Andrius Pašukonis

The frogs were moved to test their spatial skills and allow the team to track them on their return journey home. Before and after the move, the frogs had a little trip to the spa, where a tiny bath allowed the researchers to collect hormones from the bath water. More than 200 frogs were captured and relocated either 50 or 200 meters (164 or 656 feet) from their known home territory. Frogs that made 70 percent of the journey within a set timeframe were judged to have returned home.  

The results of the study suggest that the androgen-spillover hypothesis is most likely, as the team found that females of the dyeing poison frog navigated better than their male counterparts. In the diablito frogs that have predominantly female parental care and larger home ranges, the females did not navigate better than the males. Females were also slightly more accurate with their routes home than males across the longer distances. 

The study is published in eLife.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tunisia’s president indicates he will amend constitution
  2. Nasdaq short interest down 0.07% in mid-September
  3. German Social Democrats upbeat about three-way coalition talks
  4. Adding Gold To Wine Could Be The Key To Making It Taste Better

Source Link: Tiny Frogs In G-Strings Reveal Insights Into Amphibian Rainforest Navigation

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • JWST Confirms Day-Long Gamma-Ray Burst Was The Most Energetic Event Humanity Has Witnessed
  • These Birds Self-Cannibalize Their Own Organs To Complete Their Non-Stop 11,000-Kilometer Migration
  • “I’ve Never Seen This Happen Before”: Space Junk Found In Western Australian Desert Reported To Have Landed On Fire
  • Armadillo Girdled Lizards Turn Themselves Into An Ouroboros To Protect Their Underbelly
  • Opium Found In Rare Ancient Egyptian Vase Dedicated To “Great King” Xerxes
  • COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines Boosted Survival Almost 5-Fold In Some Cancer Patients
  • Sleuths Uncover Hidden Message In CIA’s Mysterious Kryptos Sculpture After 35 Years
  • Meat-Eating In US Cities Emits 329 Million Tons Of Carbon – But This Could Be Cut In Half
  • The World’s Oldest Known Chimpanzee Is Over 80 Years Old, And He’s Our Favorite Chill Childminder
  • Mysterious JWST Object “Capotauro” Might Be The First Galaxy In The Universe
  • 4.4-Million-Year-Old Ankle Bone Suggests Humans Evolved From African Ape-Like Ancestor
  • Hib: The Deadliest Disease You Might Never Have Heard Of (Because Vaccines Are Awesome)
  • The Legend Of Ol’ Rip The Horned Toad Who Reportedly Survived 31 Years Of Hibernation And Met President Coolidge
  • Newly Discovered “Reset Button” Lets Mathematicians Undo Any Rotation
  • Bear-Sized Snow Sloths? Meet Megalonyx, The Ice Age Giants That Lived Until 13,000 Years Ago
  • Why Can’t Mormons Drink Coffee?
  • In 1997, A Zoo Chimp Amazed Scientists By Gathering Rocks To Throw At Visitors
  • YouTuber Films Laser Light At 2 Billion Frames Per Second In His Garage
  • The Time To Watch Comet Lemmon Is Now
  • Ig Nobel-Winning “Butt-Breathing” Technique Moves One Step Closer To Saving Lives
  • 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