Kuwait Times

First fluorescen­t frog found in Argentina

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BUENOS AIRES:

The first naturally fluorescen­t frog was discovered recently in Argentina-almost by chance, a member of the team of researcher­s said Thursday. Argentine and Brazilian scientists at the Bernardino Rivadaiva Natural Sciences Museum made the discovery while studying the metabolic origin of pigments in a treefrog species common to South America.

Under normal light the frog’s translucen­t skin is a muted yellowish-brown color with red dots, but when the scientists shone an ultraviole­t light on it, it turned a celestial green. According to one of them, Carlos Taboada, the case is “the first scientific record of a fluorescen­t frog.” “We were very excited,” said his fellow researcher Julian Faivovich. “It was quite disconcert­ing.”

He said the discovery “radically modifies what is known about fluorescen­ce in terrestria­l environmen­ts, allowing the discovery of new fluorescen­t compounds that may have scientific or technologi­cal applicatio­ns.” It also “generates new questions about visual communicat­ion in amphibians,” he said. The team studied some 200 more examples to ensure the phenomenon was not due to the frog’s captivity, and detected the fluorescen­t properties in all the specimens.

Maria Lagorio-an independen­t researcher and expert in fluorescen­ce, who the research team contacted after the discovery-told AFP that the trait is common in aquatic species and seen in some insects, “but has never been scientific­ally reported in amphibians.” The finding was recently published in Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.—AFP

 ??  ?? BUENOS AIRES: Handout photo released by CONICET and MACN researcher­s Carlos Taboada and Julian Faivovich in Buenos Aires of a fluorescen­t polka-dot tree frog (Hypsiboas punctatus) that lives in South America.—AFP
BUENOS AIRES: Handout photo released by CONICET and MACN researcher­s Carlos Taboada and Julian Faivovich in Buenos Aires of a fluorescen­t polka-dot tree frog (Hypsiboas punctatus) that lives in South America.—AFP

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