Of Frogs and Men

December 2, 2009

Earliest neobatrachian frog

Neobatrchian’s comprise more than 95% of all living frogs (and thus the bulk of living amphibians). Until recently, the earliest fossil record of this diverse group was based on a few records from the latest Cretaceous (Maastrichtian). In a recent paper in Cretaceous Research, Ana Báez and colleagues describe several new frog taxa from the upper portion of the Lower Cretaceous (Aptian-Albian). Via a cladisitic analysis, the authors nicely demonstrate that at least two of these new taxa are nested well within Neobatrchia, thus demonstrating that these are the earliest representatives of this diverse clade.

December 1, 2009

Frog uses indirect-recognition to find offspring

Filed under: Amphibians, Biodiversity, Frogs, Research — David Blackburn @ 10:25 am

A recent paper in the journal Animal Behavior finds that females of the Strawberry Poison-frog, Oophaga pumilio, uses physical location rather than offspring identity to locate tadpoles in bromeliads. Females of this species tend to offspring that have been deposited in bromeliads by occasionally visiting these little tanks of water to provide unfertilized eggs to the tadpoles.

October 13, 2009

New progress on the natural history of chytrid fungi

Filed under: Amphibians, Biodiversity, Miscellaneous, News, Research — David Blackburn @ 2:11 pm

A new study out in PNAS finds that chytrid fungi dominate the fungal cummunities at high elevations in places as distant as the Himalayas and the Rocky Mountains in the U.S.

There’s also a short piece on this in the Scientist.

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