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 2, 2009
December 1, 2009
Frog uses indirect-recognition to find offspring
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
October 8, 2009
Origin of viviparity in iguanian lizards predates recent glaciation
A recent paper by Jim Schulte and Moreno-Roark in FirstCite in Biology Letters reveals that the transition from oviparity to viviparity preceded recent glaciation events, contrary to some previous hypotheses regarding the driving factors behind the origin of viviparity. This work nicely demonstrates how phylogenetic analysis and divergence date estimation can be combined to ask basic questions about the evolution of life history traits.
September 24, 2009
Lower Pleistocene hominins involved in more than just passive scavenging
New paper out in Journal of Human Evolution provides potential evidence from a Lower Pleistocene Olduvai Gorge site that hominins were engaged in more than just passive scavenging of small to medium-size mammal carcasses. Combined with information for early usage of fire by hominins in the Lower Pleistocene, there seems to be a gradually building case that hominins have been active modifiers of the African landscape for a very long time.
Validation of taxonomy of old museum specimens using molecular data
Nice new paper in Biology Letters about using molecular data to validate the species-level taxonomy of a hummingbird species known from a 100-year old specimen. For more click here.
While not quite the same, there has been an interesting flourishing of descriptions of new species of frogs that appear to have gone extinct many years ago. For a recent example, see here for a paper on Sri Lankan shrub frogs by Madhava Meegaskumbura. Similar papers will also soon be coming out for other genera of frogs. It’s a true shame that we are now describing species that have recently gone extinct because of habitat destruction or the spread of infectious diseases.