Frog mating calls change with temperature and may signal when ponds are safe for breeding, offering insight into climate change.
In A Nutshell: Male frog calls change with water temperature: Warmer water produces faster, shorter calls while cold water ...
A Brazilian study described in an article published in the journal Salamandra evidences the versatility of amphibians in terms of reproductive modes: their eggs and larvae can develop in at least 74 ...
Phylogeny, classification, and morphological evolution -- Water relations -- Temperature relations -- Respiration -- Metabolism and energetics -- Movements and orientation -- Anuran vocal ...
Pt. I. Evolutionary history -- Tetrapod relationships and evolutionary systematics -- Anatomy of amphibians and reptiles -- Evolution of ancient and modern amphibians and reptiles -- pt. II.
A team of biologists from the University of Delhi and Zoological Survey of India, Harvard University, and the University of Minnesota has discovered a unique breeding behavior in a species of frog ...
In the wild world of nature, where an organism’s sole aim is to succeed at passing on their genes at any cost, it’s not surprising many species have aggressive, and even deadly, mating behaviors. But ...
In a new study, researchers have investigated how the endocrine-disrupting substance linuron affects reproduction in the West African clawed frog, Xenopus tropicalis. The scientists found that linuron ...