The Hindu - International

When this tiny frog in Brazil screams, you won’t hear it

- Arkatapa Basu

Frogs use a myriad ways to defend themselves against predators. Some are poisonous. Some are brightly coloured. Some even in ate their bodies with air to appear bigger.

Another way frogs have been known to defend themselves, or alert others nearby, about a predator is to make loud sounds.

Recently, scientists have found that one tiny species of frog endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest emits ultrasonic sounds that are inaudible to humans but can scare o predators.

In their work, published in the journal Acta Ethologica earlier this year, Brazilian scientists from the Institute of Biology,

São Paulo, and the Project Dacnis preserve recorded the ultrasonic ‘screams’ of the tiny leaf litter frog (Haddadus binotatus) while in the rainforest of Brazil.

The researcher­s found that the frog — which is smaller than an inch — while emitting the scream would raise the upper portion of its body, open its mouth wide, and throw its head back. This behaviour was, they said, was a typical defensive movement against predators.

The frog would then close its mouth just a little and appear to emit a call.

However, the researcher­s did not hear any sounds.

They subsequent­ly used specialise­d

The frequency of the frog’s call spanned the 7 kHZ to 20 kHZ range, which is within humans’ hearing range, but also reached up to 20 kHZ to 44 kHZ, which is beyond what the human ear can discern

equipment to check for the presence of a call, and found that the frog was screaming at a frequency much higher than humans could hear.

After analysing the call, they ascertaine­d that the call’s frequency spanned the 7 kHZ to 20 kHZ range, which is within humans’ hearing range, but also reached up to 20 kHZ to 44 kHZ, which is beyond what the human ear can discern.

Researcher­s think leaf litter frogs emit these ultrasonic calls to stave o predators or, possibly, attract other animals that might attack the predator and protect the frogs.

One of the scientists involved in this study, Mariana Retuci Pontes, had previously suspected the frogs used ultrasonic screams as a defence mechanism after she had come across what looked like a Hensel’s big-headed frog (Ischnocnem­a henselii) in Brazil’s rainforest­s.

When she picked up this frog to photograph it, it made defensive movements that resembled those of the leaf litter frog. However, she did not have the equipment to record its calls on hand at the time and could not tell if they were ultrasonic.

The ”nding that the leaf litter frog emits ultrasonic sounds has kicked up questions for the researcher­s about which predators are aected by the screams, how they react to it and what the scream’s ultimate purpose is.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A leaf litter frog emits ultrasonic sounds that are inaudible to humans but can scare oŸ predators.
REUTERS A leaf litter frog emits ultrasonic sounds that are inaudible to humans but can scare oŸ predators.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India