Date: 15/08/2020 14:33:16
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1604910
Subject: Frog Mates With Two Females in an Unusual Love Triangle

In a study published this week in Science Advances, lead author Fábio de Sá with the São Paulo State University in Brazil describes the unusual mating dynamics of T. taophora, a frog that lives in Brazil’s Atlantic rainforest. In mating season, males of this species tend to pair up with just two females, an unusual dynamic that sometimes produces tension among competing females when resources are scarce, reports Katherine J. Wu for the New York Times.

Many animals such as lemurs, elephant seals or many types of fish, mate in polygynous mating systems. Typically, multiple females will mate with a single male in what’s known as a “harem” polygyny. However, scientists had never before witnessed polygynous behavior in amphibians, Issam Ahmed reports for AFP.

Scientists hypothesize that this mating structure is advantageous for males, because it allows them to mate with more than one female. Conversely, “he advantage for the female is it’s better to have a good quality male and a good quality breeding site sharing it with another female—rather than being exposed and not finding another frog or finding a lower quality frog,” de Sá tells New Scientist. T. taophora frogs will form long-lasting bonds with just two, and sometimes three, females, although one “dominant” female usually does most of the mating.

Male frogs will battle to claim the best seeps—wet, rocky spots where they wait for females to arrive, mate and deposit eggs. Long spines attached to the males’ thumbs aid in combat, per AFP.

Sometimes, females would arrive at a male’s seep and try to eat the eggs that other females had laid in the spot. As Nina Pullano reports for Inverse, males would sometimes react to this behavior by chasing the female away or beginning to mate with them.

Other times, they’d use their strong forearms to briefly embrace the female until she stopped trying to eat his progeny. Lauren O’Connell, a biologist at Stanford University not involved in the study, describes this behavior to the Times as a kind of “distraction hug.”


A male Thoropa taophora, pictured near Sununga beach in Brazil. (Fábio de Sá)

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/frog-mates-two-females-once-180975563/

Reply Quote

Date: 15/08/2020 16:59:00
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1604957
Subject: re: Frog Mates With Two Females in an Unusual Love Triangle

Brazil, eh.

Reply Quote

Date: 16/08/2020 14:39:54
From: wookiemeister
ID: 1605302
Subject: re: Frog Mates With Two Females in an Unusual Love Triangle

its where the nuts come from

Reply Quote