Caudata.org: Newts and Salamanders Portal

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!
Did you know that registered users see fewer ads? Register today!

UK Press BBC News: 'Alien scene' of tadpoles' feast

Mark

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 14, 2004
Messages
3,259
Reaction score
59
Location
Bristol
See article for video footage:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8185125.stm?ls


"Alien-like" scenes of tadpoles feasting on eggs emerging from their mother have been caught on camera.
The footage marks the success of a captive breeding programme for the critically endangered mountain chicken frog, one of the world's largest frogs.
In April, 50 of the amphibian giants were airlifted from Montserrat after a deadly fungus swept through the island, devastating the population.
Now several breeding programmes are under way to save the frogs.
Once numbers have been boosted in captivity, researchers hope to reintroduce the frogs back into the wild within the next two years.

The remarkable footage was recorded at the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, in Jersey, which took in 12 of the rescued frogs. Twenty-six others went to Parken Zoo in Sweden, and 12 are now housed in ZSL London Zoo.

So far, four pairs of mountain chicken frogs have started to breed - which could result in hundreds of frogs. And this has given researchers an insight into the way that these unusual amphibians care for their offspring.
Professor John Fa, director of Durrell, said: "Mountain chickens have very peculiar breeding habits because they form foam nests in burrows in the ground."
The females lay their eggs in these nests, which eventually hatch into tadpoles. But as the nests are underground, food is scarce - so the frogs need to find a way to provide nutrition for their young.
Professor Fa explained: "In the case of mountain chickens, we have discovered that the female comes into the nest and starts laying a string of infertile eggs.

"We thought that the eggs would come out and drop to the bottom of the nest and then the tadpoles would start eating them. But the footage shows about 40 tadpoles congregating around the female and eating the eggs as they come out of the female's body.
"Every now and again, the female uses her back legs to push the tadpoles away from her body so another set can come up and eat as much as they can."
He added: "It is really weird - it is an alien scene. This is the first time we have caught this on film."

The mountain chicken frog (Leptodactylus fallax) is one of the world's most threatened frogs. The frog is so called because its meat tastes like chicken.
It was once found on seven Caribbean Islands, but thanks to hunting and environmental pressures it is currently found only on Montserrat and Dominica.

Now, however, the deadly chytrid fungus, which has devastated amphibian populations around the globe, has also ravaged Dominica's mountain chickens.
The fungus was first detected on the island in 2002, and within 15 months, 80% of the mountain chicken population had been obliterated.
Conservationists were extremely concerned when they found that the chytrid fungus had spread to Montserrat earlier this year, and was sweeping quickly through the last mountain chicken population.
The team made a decision to airlift some of the last healthy frogs and bring them into captivity in a bid to save the creatures from extinction.
Professor Fa said: "Things are not going terribly well in Montserrat because chytrid has now infected the safe population - or at least the one we thought was safe."
The breeding success has offered scientists a ray of hope in an otherwise bleak situation, and they are now concentrating on increasing the frogs' numbers.

They hope to eventually release the captive mountain chickens back to their native home of Montserrat, and are currently looking for sites that are free of the deadly fungus.
But Professor Fa said: "If that doesn't work, if the area is infected, we will have to think again, and it could be that we take the animals to another island.
"Within a year or two we have to get these animals back to the wild. The longer you keep them in captivity, the more difficult it is for them to enjoy a life in the wild again."
 

Azhael

Site Contributor
Joined
May 7, 2007
Messages
6,645
Reaction score
103
Location
Burgos
Wow, those are some of the most freakishly weird tadpoles i´ve ever seen. Fascinating behaviour indeed. The lateral pouches for storing eggs so that they can get as much as possible during the fast feast are very interesting.
 

KJ_29

New member
Joined
Apr 9, 2009
Messages
84
Reaction score
6
Does anyone else find this inexplicably discomforting?
Interesting nonetheless.
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    There are no messages in the chat. Be the first one to say Hi!
    Top