Search results for "Tadpole"

showing 7 items of 17 documents

Aposematism facilitates the diversification of parental care strategies in poison frogs

2021

AbstractMany organisms have evolved adaptations to increase the odds of survival of their offspring. Parental care has evolved several times in animals including ectotherms. In amphibians, ~ 10% of species exhibit parental care. Among these, poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) are well-known for their extensive care, which includes egg guarding, larval transport, and specialized tadpole provisioning with trophic eggs. At least one third of dendrobatids displaying aposematism by exhibiting warning coloration that informs potential predators about the presence of defensive skin toxins. Aposematism has a central role in poison frog diversification, including diet specialization, and visual and acoust…

MalevaroitusväriBehavioural ecologysammakotScienceevoluutioZoologyContext (language use)AposematismBiologyEvolutionary ecologyeläinten käyttäytyminenArticlePredationeriytyminenAnimalsMaternal BehaviorPhylogenyTrophic levelLarvaMultidisciplinaryBehavior AnimallisääntymiskäyttäytyminenBiological MimicryReproductionQRbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionTadpolePhylogeneticsLarvaEctothermMedicineFemaleAnuraPaternal careScientific Reports
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Pool choice in a vertical landscape: Tadpole‐rearing site flexibility in phytotelm‐breeding frogs

2021

Abstract Many species of Neotropical frogs have evolved to deposit their tadpoles in small water bodies inside plant structures called phytotelmata. These pools are small enough to exclude large predators but have limited nutrients and high desiccation risk. Here, we explore phytotelm use by three common Neotropical species: Osteocephalus oophagus, an arboreal frog that periodically feeds eggs to its tadpoles; Dendrobates tinctorius, a tadpole‐transporting poison frog with cannibalistic tadpoles; and Allobates femoralis, a terrestrial tadpole‐transporting poison frog with omnivorous tadpoles. We found that D. tinctorius occupies pools across the chemical and vertical gradient, whereas A. fe…

Osteocephalus oophagusArboreal locomotionvesistötEcologybiologyDendrobatessammakotNiche differentiationZoologyparental carePlant litterbiology.organism_classificationTadpolePredationpoison frogstadpolesphytotelmataAllobates femoralisniche partitioningcompetitionQH540-549.5Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsvesiekologiaNature and Landscape ConservationOriginal ResearchEcology and Evolution
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Mass dimension one fermions and their gravitational interaction

2019

We investigate in detail the interaction between the spin-${1/2}$ fields endowed with mass dimension one and the graviton. We obtain an interaction vertex that combines the characteristics of scalar-graviton and Dirac's fermion-graviton vertices, due to the scalar-dynamic attribute and the fermionic structure of this field. It is shown that the vertex obtained obeys the Ward-Takahashi identity, ensuring the gauge invariance for this interaction. In the contribution of the mass dimension one fermion to the graviton propagator at one-loop, we found the conditions for the cancellation of the tadpole term by a cosmological counter-term. We calculate the scattering process for arbitrary momentum…

PhysicsPhysics::General PhysicsNewtonian potentialField (physics)High Energy Physics::LatticeScalar (mathematics)GravitonGeneral Physics and AstronomyPropagatorFOS: Physical sciencesTadpole (physics)01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasGravitational potentialTheoretical physicsHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyGeneral Relativity and Quantum CosmologyHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)0103 physical sciencesGauge theory010306 general physics
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Do cilia drive water through the buccopharyngeal and opercular cavities in the fossorial Otophryne robusta tadpole?

1993

biologyCiliumOperculum (bryozoa)FossorialAnimal Science and ZoologyWater currentOtophryne robustaAnatomybiology.organism_classificationOral cavityTadpoleEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmphibia-Reptilia
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First description of immature stages of Gastropini, Gastrops willistoni Cresson (Diptera: Ephydridae) preying on eggs in a foam nest of Leptodactylus…

2020

The third instar larva and puparium of Gastrops willistoni Cresson (Diptera: Ephydridae), preying on eggs in a foam nest of Leptodactylus knudseni Heyer (Anura: Leptodactylidae), in a central Amazonian dryland forest (Brazil) are described for the first time. The fusiform larva has a short breathing tube, its anterior spiracles are fan-shaped and posterior spiracles with three spircular openings. Pupa is ovoid with a broad anterior margin and bifurcate posterior tip. The taxonomic relationship of the frog egg predators, Gastrops Williston and Typopsilopa Cresson, are discussed.

frogfliestadpolesmorphologylarvaepupaeshore fliesZootaxa
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Mind the gap: Treefalls as drivers of parental trade-offs

2015

Abstract Tree‐fall gaps are small‐scale disturbances whose formation, colonization, and role in forest dynamics are well documented, but whose effects on animal ecology are still greatly overlooked, except for studies comparing species richness of gaps 6+ months old to that in the closed canopy. Other factors associated with the invasion of fresh tree‐fall gaps such as animal breeding adaptations have been largely neglected. I studied the immediate (within hours and days) arrival of the poison frog Dendrobates tinctorius in new tree‐fall gaps to examine the dynamics of their invasion in relation to tadpole rearing. I found that rearing sites are occupied sooner and tadpoles deposited at hig…

poison frogEcologyForest dynamicsbiologyDendrobatesEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectCannibalismbiology.organism_classificationTadpoleCompetition (biology)cannibalismAnimal ecologyphytotelmatata1181EcosystemSpecies richnesscompetitionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicshabitat disturbanceNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonOriginal ResearchEcology and Evolution
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Upper thermal threshold of Lepidurus arcticus (Branchiopoda, Notostraca) in lakes on the southern outreach of its distribution range

2021

Qvenild T, Fjeld E, Fjellheim A, Hammar J, Hesthagen T and Lakka H-K. 2021. Upper thermal threshold of Lepidurus arcticus (Branchiopoda, Notostraca) in lakes on the southern outreach of its distribution range. Fauna norvegica 41: 50–88. The Arctic tadpole shrimp Lepidurus arcticus has a circumpolar distribution and the Scandes (Fennoscandian Mountains) marks its southernmost limit in Europe. Within this area, 391 natural and 88 regulated lakes with L. arcticus have been identified, of which 87% are above the treeline. The lakes hosting L. arcticus decrease in altitude from south to north, which results from its temperature preferences. The majority of the locations are at a lower lake air t…

treelineFennoscandian mountain ridgelämmönsietoVDP::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480:Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480 [VDP]äyriäisetthermal conditionsCrustaceadistribution14. Life underwaterlife cycle mismatchesupper thermal thresholdArctic tadpole shrimpScandesclimate indicatorsopeutuminenarktinen aluelife cycle mismatchFennoscandian Mountain ridgelevinneisyysilmastonmuutoksetclimate changeQL1-99113. Climate action1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyVDP::Zoology and botany: 480Animal Science and ZoologyZoology
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