by Tanya Lewis
Frogs and other
amphibians lay eggs, but mammals give birth to live young, right? Not
always. A newly described species of frog gives birth to live tadpoles,
and is the only known frog to do so, researchers say.
The discovery
happened one night last summer, when researcher Jim McGuire was tromping
through the rainforest in Sulawesi, an Indonesian island east of
Borneo. McGuire stumbled across what looked like a single male frog. But
when he reached out to grab it, he found himself holding much more,
said McGuire, a herpetologist at the University of California, Berkeley.
"As soon as I picked her up, she squirted tadpoles all over my hand,"
McGuire told Live Science. He didn't have time to take a video of the
frog giving birth, but did find more tadpoles in nearby pools. The find
"was clear indication" that the females do in fact give birth to live
tadpoles, he said.
The frogs
were members of a group of Asian fanged frogs that were discovered
several decades ago by McGuire's colleague Djoko Iskandar, a zoologist
at Indonesia's Institut Teknologi Bandung, but the species had not yet
been reported in a scientific paper, McGuire said.Iskandar had suspected such frogs might gave birth to live young instead of laying eggs, but scientists had never observed the animal mating or birthing tadpoles until McGuire's find.
McGuire and his colleagues named the species he found Limnonectes larvaepartus, and describe it in a study published in the journal PLOS ONE.
Frog fertilization
Frogs reproduce in a variety of ways, the researchers said. In most
species, fertilization happens outside of the female's body: the female
lays eggs and the male then lays sperm on top of them. But in about a
dozen species, the males fertilize the eggs inside the female's body.
For most of these frogs, the process isn't well-understood. But for two
species of "tailed" frogs, the males have evolved a penis-like organ
called the tail, which transfers sperm to the female. The female tailed
frogs then lay their fertilized eggs underneath rocks in streams. Some
other frogs that have internal fertilization give birth to miniature
frogs, or "froglets."
But L. larvaepartus
is the only species known to give birth to live tadpoles, the
researchers said. The species seems to prefer giving birth in small
pools, away from streams, perhaps to avoid bigger fanged frogs that live
there. Males of the species may guard the tadpoles after they're born, some evidence suggests.
The amazing thing, McGuire said, is that internal fertilization occurs
so infrequently among frogs. "Internal fertilization has evolved
independently only four times in frogs," he said.
The frog is only the fourth described species of fanged frog on
Sulawesi, but the researchers said in their report that they suspect
there may be as many as 25 species. Fanged frogs are named for the
fanglike structures on their lower jaw, which are used in fighting. The
creatures can weigh as much as 2 lbs. (900 grams), but some are no more
than the weight of a few paperclips. L. larvaepartus weighs about 0.18 to 0.21 ounces (5 to 6 grams).
The island where the frogs are found, Sulawesi, formed when several
islands merged together about 8 to 10 million years ago. Today, it is a hot spot for evolutionary diversity.
Many species of fanged frogs may live in a single area, but each may
have adapted to their own ecological niches, the researchers said. They
are now trying to understand how much of the diversification occurred
before the islands merged, and how much happened afterward.
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