Anomaloglossus beebei | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Amphibia |
Order: | Anura |
Family: | Aromobatidae |
Genus: | Anomaloglossus |
Species: | A. beebei |
Binomial name | |
Anomaloglossus beebei (Noble, 1923) | |
Synonyms | |
Colostethus beebei(Noble, 1923) |
Anomaloglossus beebei (common names: Beebe's rocket frog, golden rocket frog) is a species of frog in the family Aromobatidae. This frog is endemic to Guyana, specifically in the Kaieteur National Park. It mainly survives on the giant bromeliad called Brocchinia micrantha . [2] The phytotelmata of this bromeliad is the site of oviposition and tadpole rearing and are defended over time by the males. The females of this species are more brightly golden coloured whereas males are more of a dull tan with brown pigmentation. [3] Males take care of offspring and are preferred due to the elongation of their calls. [4]
A. beebei has granular central skin, and moderate basal toe webbing. The male A. beebei has a snout-vent length maximum of 16.80 mm. [5] This frog has a shorter finger I than finger II and dorsolateral stripes, which help differentiate them from other species. [6] The golden rocket frog species exhibits a rare phenomenon of reverse sexual dichromatism, meaning that the females are showier than the males. In the case of this species, the females are more brightly coloured compared to the males. The females are a bright golden colour, whereas the males tend to be a dull tan with partial brown pigmentation located on their dorsal surface, flanks, and legs. [3] The presence of this brown pigmentation increases when calling. [3] Males have partial brown pigmentation on their dorsal surface, flanks, and legs. [3] Orange colouration development is seen in only sexually mature females. [3] According to some scientists, this bright colouration is not due to aposematic signalling as this species is not poisonous according to some accounts nor is it a form of Batesian mimicry as there are no toxic poison frogs near the site. It is possible that this may be due to the colour being a sex recognition signal, a target of male mate choice, or a form of female dominance or aggression. The colour difference between males and females within this species is possible due to an intraspecific signal. Females are not known to call whereas males are known to call. [3] It is important to note that there are conflicting reports regarding whether this frog is poisonous or not. [7] [3] Males of this species can be differentiated due to the distinctiveness of the advertisement calls that they make. The feature of call interval and call rate provides the information for there to be distinctiveness as there is extensive variation amongst males. [8] The tadpoles for this species are yellow and larger than the tadpoles of the A. kaiei..” [6] The A. beebei and A. roraima species are separated via allopatric speciation. [5]
The golden rocket frog is native and restricted to Guyana, which is in South America. Specifically, this frog is found only on the Kaieteur plateau in the Kaieteur National Park. The species is found at an elevation of around 450 metres. Kaieteur National Park is the region where Brocchinia micrantha , a species of bromeliad flower, is found. The frogs use this plant for living and breeding. The leaves are beneficial as they serve as oviposition and tadpole-rearing sites. The Brocchinia micrantha flowers are able to hold some water from rainwater or mist on the leaves which tend to be utilized by A. beebei. These wells associated with the leaves are called phytotelmata. The water that is accumulated in these microhabitats tends to be acidic and low in dissolved oxygen and conductivity.”. [9] Additionally, the density of distribution of the frog is influenced by the Kaieteur Falls. Some researchers believe this is due to the mist produced by these falls. [2]
This species is listed as endangered under the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species [1] as it is found only in one location, which is the Kaieteur National Park, and within the park it occupies less than 20 square kilometres. [8]
This species was formerly called Colostethus beebei, is now called Anomaloglossus beebei. [10] Social recognition plays a large role in this species as seen through the presence of the dear enemy effect. This effect mediates neighbour recognition and has been documented in songbirds and other frogs including bullfrogs and olive frogs. Dear enemy effect indicates that there is a behavioural discrimination between individuals, in that there would be a more aggressive response to strangers compared to the response to neighbours. This can be seen through differences in vocal output. In an experiment involving male golden rocket frogs and speakers emitting neighbour calls and non-neighbour calls, the results show that the males approached the non-neighbour call speaker while vocalizing aggressive calls. This effect mediates neighbour recognition and has been documented in songbirds and other frogs including bullfrogs and olive frogs. Some scientists point to the idea that convergent evolution may have occurred as this specific social recognition behaviour is seen in the golden rocket frog, which is a dendrobatid, and in some ranid species of frogs. [10]
When the tadpoles are in the phytotelm, they will sometimes feed on fallen leaves and microorganisms. Tadpoles tend to obtain nutrients by grazing on algal mats and catching prey in the pools created in the bromeliad. [9] Additionally, sometimes the females lay unfertilized eggs in the phytotelma for the purpose of the eggs to be consumed by the tadpoles for nutritional purposes. It has been observed that larger tadpoles will exhibit cannibalism by eating the smaller tadpoles, however, this is uncommon. [11]
Breeding occurs year-round but is the highest from June to August. These months are the rainiest, which is beneficial as it fills up the wells created by the phytotelm with water. [11] Reproduction occurs on the plant. Males defend the phytotelm territory, which allows for the female mate to oviposit. [10] Egg provisioning is preceded by courtship. [6] This species is theorized to exhibit long-term pair bonding. [9] Compared to where tadpole rearing occurred, areas, where oviposition was common, tend to have lower temperatures and leaf angles, less water, more dissolved oxygen, and more crabs. [11] This Neotropical species of frog exhibits biparental care. [4] Males tend to have a higher potential reproductive rate than females as they can care for egg clutches from multiple females. [3] Once females accept the site from the calling male, they remain in the phytotelm. The female tends to deposit about 4-6 eggs near the water line. Soon after, the male transports the tadpoles to another phytotelma. [11] Males moisten eggs by squirting fluid from their cloacae when humidity is low. [9] Female parental care in A. beebei has plasticity. This has been noticed in both laboratory settings and in natural conditions when there is an absence of a male caregiver. Plasticity is shown by the female performing the action of the male, which is transporting the tadpoles. [12] Additionally, mothers can lay trophic eggs while repeatedly visiting offspring. [13]
This type of frog has different forms of calling meant for different situations. Males use three different types of vocalizations: courtship calls, territorial encounters, and advertisements. [9] When males are in their phytotelmata territory, they try to attract females using long-range advertisement calls. These advertisement calls are composed of three or four high-pitched, short and rapid repeated pulses with 35 millisecond durations. These pulses occur at rates of 10 to 12 pulses per second. Once the females are drawn in, the males use a different form of calling, which is categorized as close-range courtship calls. This call convinces the females to mate with them. About 40% of a male golden rocket frog's energy for activity is used for vocalizations. [10] Males tend to call from their territories for several hours a day [7] Some scientists have concluded that females tend to prefer males with higher call rates, as a high call rate is associated with a good male body condition. Thus, the call rate indirectly provides information regarding a male's resource acquiring and competitive abilities. [8] Other scientists have concluded that the main feature of a call that is looked at by females when determining a mate is the duration of the call. A longer duration of call has been associated with better parental care. [4] Females that respond to the calls are led to multiple phytotelmata by the courting male. In some instances, it was found that the females might leave the male that was calling and look at other sites. [11] These frogs tend to have more acoustic complexity when performing vocalizations meant for mating and courtship compared to when the vocalization is meant for aggressive behaviours. [14]
The properties of a male's calling are not correlated to snout-vent length or mass and dominant frequency. It is possible that the calling provides information so that species recognition can occur as there are frogs that that are similar and live nearby the golden rocket frog. For example, the Kaiei's rocket frog is closely related to the golden rocket frog and its call is like the advertisement calls of the golden rocket. However, the Kaiei's rocket frog has a call with a lower dominant frequency and pulse rate. [8]
The three calls that the Anomaloglossuss beebei frog produces are advertisement, courtship, and aggressive calls. All three calls include a short period of multiple pulses, but there are also noticeable differences between the calls in different parts of each. The advertisement calls are produced at a high amplitude and have longer individual pulses themselves when compared to the courtship and aggressive calls. The courtship calls were distinguishable by their low frequencies. The aggressive calls included a higher number of pulses for each call and had longer waiting periods between each call produced. The aggressive call even sometimes has one or two beginning pulses before the pulsed call begins. [15]
Males are able to differentiate neighbours of the same species from individuals from another species, which is beneficial. Territorial disputes can occur between males, which results to an escalation to physical aggression. This involves wrestling and chasing that can last for several days. Additionally, the ability to differentiate is important as it indicates the presence of the taxonomically common ability of nonassociative learning, thus allowing for a modulation of the male's aggression. [7]
Females are sometimes aggressive to other females and to males, however it is limited as they are not involved in defending the whole bromeliads like males. [3]
Predators of golden rocket frog embryos and tadpoles are found in the bromeliads. These predators include the grapsid crab, dragonfly larvae, and spiders found in phytotelmata. [9] These predators were more prevalent in phytotelmata that have lower leaf angles. Grapsid crabs also consume adults. [11] Adults are not defensive towards the crab; however they try to minimize predation risks. [4]
Poison dart frog is the common name of a group of frogs in the family Dendrobatidae which are native to tropical Central and South America. These species are diurnal and often have brightly colored bodies. This bright coloration is correlated with the toxicity of the species, making them aposematic. Some species of the family Dendrobatidae exhibit extremely bright coloration along with high toxicity — a feature derived from their diet of ants, mites and termites— while species which eat a much larger variety of prey have cryptic coloration with minimal to no amount of observed toxicity. Many species of this family are threatened due to human infrastructure encroaching on their habitats.
Kaieteur National Park is a national park located in the Potaro-Siparuni Region of Guyana, roughly 633 km south of Georgetown, the nation's capital, closer to the border with Brazil than to the Caribbean coast. It is widely considered the country's only national park, as the capital's National Park is a not a true wilderness reserve. Kaieteur is part of the Guianan moist forests ecoregion. The main tourist attraction in the park is Kaieteur Falls, considered the largest single-drop waterfall anywhere on earth, by volume of water. Orinduik Falls is another water-feature in the park, a series of smaller, cascading waterfalls. There is a popular swimming hole located at Orinduik.
The strawberry poison frog, strawberry poison-dart frog or blue jeans poison frog is a species of small poison dart frog found in Central America. It is common throughout its range, which extends from eastern central Nicaragua through Costa Rica and northwestern Panamá. The species is often found in humid lowlands and premontane forest, but large populations are also found in disturbed areas such as plantations. The strawberry poison frog is perhaps most famous for its widespread variation in coloration, comprising approximately 15–30 color morphs, most of which are presumed to be true-breeding. O. pumilio, while not the most poisonous of the dendrobatids, is the most toxic member of its genus.
The gray treefrog is a species of small arboreal holarctic tree frog native to much of the eastern United States and southeastern Canada.
Hyalinobatrachium fleischmanni, also known as Fleischmann's glass frog or the northern glass frog, is a species of frog in the family Centrolenidae. It is found in the tropical Americas from southern Mexico to Ecuador. Specifically, these frogs occur in Mexico, Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. It has often been confused with related species, and the exact distribution depends on the source. This frog tends to have green skin, pale yellowish spots, yellow fingertips and translucent skin covering its stomach.
Allobates femoralis is a species of frog in the family Aromobatidae. It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, and Suriname. Its natural habitat is tropical lowland forests.
Anomaloglossus praderioi is a species of frog in the family Aromobatidae. It is found in the Pantepui region of southeastern Venezuela and western Guyana. More specifically, this frog is known from Mount Roraima, Sierra de Lema in Venezuela, and Maringma-tepui in Guyana. Its actual range is probably wider and might reach into northern Brazil.
Anomaloglossus stepheni is a species of frog in the family Aromobatidae. It is found in French Guiana and adjacent Suriname and Brazil.
Ranitomeya vanzolinii, also known as the Brazilian poison frog or spotted poison frog, is a species of frog in the Ranitomeya genus, from the poison dart frog family, Dendrobatidae. It is found in the Amazonian rainforests of Brazil and Perú, and possibly Bolivia.
The yellow-throated frog, Trinidadian stream frog, or Trinidad poison frog is a diurnal species of frog in the family Aromobatidae that is endemic to the island of Trinidad in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. Trinidad poison frogs can be found in rocky streams in moist montane forests. The species has cryptic coloration and is sexually dimorphic. Mannophryne venezuelensis from the Paria Peninsula in Venezuela were also formerly included in this species. Currently this species is listed as of "Least Concern" on IUCN, but there is a general lack of understanding of its distribution. The frog experiences habitat loss. Both sexes are territorial and provide parental care together.
Dendropsophus ebraccatus, also known as the hourglass treefrog, referring to the golden-brown hourglass shape seen surrounded by skin yellow on its back. Their underbellies are yellow. Their arms and lower legs usually display bold patterns while their upper legs or thighs are light yellow giving them the appearance of wearing no pants. The species name "ebraccata" translates to "without trousers" in Latin.
The climbing mantella is a species of diurnal poison frog of the genus Mantella that resides in the subtropical regions of northeast Madagascar. Although it spends a significant amount of time in trees or bamboo forests, this frog species is not fully arboreal and actively seeks areas with a water source.
Lithobates clamitans or Rana clamitans, commonly known as the green frog, is a species of frog native to eastern North America. The two subspecies are the bronze frog and the northern green frog.
Brocchinia micrantha is a South American species of plant, in the genus Brocchinia, of the bromeliad family (Bromeliaceae). This species is native to Venezuela and Guyana. In Venezuela, these plants may be found within Canaima National Park, near to Salto Ángel, the world’s tallest free-falling waterfall. In Guyana, this plant is commonly found at Kaieteur National Park.
Golden frog or Gold frog may refer to:
Ranitomeya variabilis, formerly known as Dendrodates variabilis, is a species of small poison dart frog distributed in northern Peru, along the eastern slope of Andes in the upper Rio Huallaga drainage basin. Its common name, Zimmerman's poison frog, is named after Elke Zimmermann, a German zoologist who described the morph of this species and differentiated it from D. ventrimaculatus. The species was formerly considered to be synonymous with Ranitomeya ventrimaculata.
Sexual selection in amphibians involves sexual selection processes in amphibians, including frogs, salamanders and newts. Prolonged breeders, the majority of frog species, have breeding seasons at regular intervals where male-male competition occurs with males arriving at the waters edge first in large number and producing a wide range of vocalizations, with variations in depth of calls the speed of calls and other complex behaviours to attract mates. The fittest males will have the deepest croaks and the best territories, with females making their mate choices at least partly based on the males depth of croaking. This has led to sexual dimorphism, with females being larger than males in 90% of species, males in 10% and males fighting for groups of females.
Anomaloglossus is a genus of frogs in the family Aromobatidae. The genus is endemic to the Guiana Shield in northern South America. It used to be placed in the family Dendrobatidae, and is still placed in that family by some sources. The name of the genus, from the Greek anomalos and glossa (=tongue), refers to the unusual tongue bearing the median lingual process, the only unambiguous phenotypic synapomorphy of this genus.
Anomaloglossus kaiei is a species of frogs in the family Aromobatidae, commonly known as the Kaie rock frog. It was named in honor of Kaie, a great Chieftain of the Patamona tribe, who sacrificed himself to the Great Spirit Makonaima by canoeing over the Kaieteur falls in order to save his own people. It is endemic to Guyana where it is known from the Kaieteur National Park and the Pacaraima Mountains. However, as it is found along the Guyana–Brazil border, it is also possibly present in Brazil. This frog shows maternal care: female frogs can provide tadpoles with trophic eggs.
Melanophryniscus xanthostomus is a species of toads in the family Bufonidae. It is endemic to the state of Santa Catarina in southern Brazil. The specific name xanthostomus is derived from the Greek words xanthos (=yellow) and stoma (=mouth) and refers to the characteristic yellow stripe along its mouth. It is distinguished from congeneric species based on differences in size; having white and/or yellow spots on its forearms, mouth, belly and cloaca; the pattern and arrangement of warts; and the presence and number of corneous spines.