Darwin's Frog is Extinct: Males "Nursed" Tadpoles in Vocal Sacs

findi

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Jan 28, 2012
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Hi, Frank Indiviglio here. Iā€™m a herpetologist, zoologist, and book author, recently retired from a career of over 20 years with the Bronx Zoo.[FONT=&quot] [/FONT]When it comes to inventive ā€“ some might say bizarre ā€“ breeding habits, amphibians are without equal. Several, such as the skin-brooding Surinam Toad, are well-known, but recent studies have revealed others that could not have been predicted ā€“ i.e. tree-dwelling tadpoles that consume bark and others that gorge upon their fatherā€™s skin (which re-grows for their dining pleasure!) or on ā€œegg omeletsā€ whipped up by mom (please see articles linked below). But even Charles Darwin would be shocked by the habits of a small frog he first described on his famous voyage, the Darwinā€™s Frog, Rhinoderma darwini. Males guard their eggs and then gobble them up. The tadpoles live in the vocal sac, feed upon nutritious parental secretions, and then emerge from their fathersā€™ mouths as fully-formed froglets! Sadly, all evidence indicates that this astonishing creature is extinct ā€“ the latest victim of the infamous chytridiomycosis epidemic. Read the rest of this article here Darwin?s Frog is Extinct - Males ?Nursed? Tadpoles in their Vocal Sacs
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My Bio, with photos of animals Iā€™ve been lucky enough to work with: That Pet Place welcomes Zoologist/Herpetologist Frank Indiviglio to That Reptile Blog | That Reptile Blog

Best Regards, Frank Indiviglio
 

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