نتایج جستجو برای: frogs

تعداد نتایج: 4867  

2001
DAVID M. MARSH

Though many amphibians breed in response to rainfall, rainfall can create substantial risks as well as benefits. For species that breed in ephemeral ponds and puddles, heavy rainfall can create many ‘‘false’’ ponds that quickly desiccate, particularly in wet years. As a result, nightly responses to rainfall may vary depending on seasonal or yearly rainfall. I used two years of data and previous...

2014

As I’ve written about before, some North American frogs have the remarkable ability to freeze solid during winter. Wood frogs (formerly Rana sylvatica, apparently now Lithobates sylvaticus) achieve this by pumping cells full of glucose, which lowers the freezing point of cytoplasm, thus preventing ice crystals forming inside cells (whilst allowing the rest of the animal to freeze). Although thi...

Journal: :Developmental Immunology 1999
Takeshi Enomoto Shin Tochinai

We have reinvestigated an important issue in the amphibian immunology that has not been settled for years since the pioneer work of Triplett, concerning the necessity of being exposed to organ-specific antigens early in development. It was found that syngeneic Lenses were rejected by frogs, Xenopus laevis, that had been enucleated (eye removed) during early larval life. This rejection did not o...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2006
Victoria A Cartledge Philip C Withers Kellie A McMaster Graham G Thompson S Don Bradshaw

Burrowed aestivating frogs of the cocoon-forming species Neobatrachus aquilonius and the non-cocooning species Notaden nichollsi were excavated in the Gibson Desert of central Australia. Their hydration state (osmotic pressure of the plasma and urine) was compared to the moisture content and water potential of the surrounding soil. The non-cocooning N. nichollsi was consistently found in sand d...

Journal: :Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Comparative experimental biology 2004
Joshua Ronald Edwards Jennifer Lynn Jenkins David Leslie Swanson

It has been hypothesized that freeze-tolerance in anurans evolved from a predisposition for dehydration tolerance. To test this hypothesis, we dehydrated summer/fall-collected and winter acclimated freeze-tolerant chorus frogs and dehydration-tolerant, but freeze-intolerant, Woodhouse's and Great Plains toads to 25% and 50% body water loss (BWL). Following treatments, we measured glucose, glyco...

2013
Damian C. Lettoof Matthew J. Greenlees Michelle Stockwell Richard Shine

One of the most devastating impacts of an invasive species is the introduction of novel parasites or diseases to native fauna. Invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) in Australia contain several types of parasites, raising concern that the toads may increase rates of parasitism in local anuran species. We sampled cane toads and sympatric native frogs (Limnodynastes peronii, Litoria latopalmata, ...

2007
GEORGE. R. ZUG George K. Zug

Zug, George R. Anuran Locomotion—Structure and Function, 2: Jumping Performance of Semiaquatic, Terrestrial, and Arboreal Frogs. Smithsonian Contribution to Zoology, number 276, 31 pages, 9 figures, 15 tables, 1978.—Frogs evolved as jumping machines. The earliest recognized anuran fossil possessed a foreshortened body and elongated hindlimbs, primary adaptations for jumping. The majority of ext...

Journal: :Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology 2007
Kerry M Kriger Felicia Pereoglou Jean-Marc Hero

Chytridiomycosis is a recently emerged, infectious skin disease of amphibians that has been linked directly to mass mortalities, population declines, and species extinctions worldwide. An understanding of the factors that limit the distribution and abundance of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (the etiological agent of chytridiomycosis) is urgently required. We conducted disease surveys at 31 low...

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 2013
Thomas Endlein Aihong Ji Diana Samuel Ning Yao Zhongyuan Wang W Jon P Barnes Walter Federle Michael Kappl Zhendong Dai

To live and clamber about in an arboreal habitat, tree frogs have evolved adhesive pads on their toes. In addition, they often have long and slender legs to facilitate not only long jumps, but also to bridge gaps between leaves when climbing. Both adhesive pads and long limbs are used in conjunction, as we will show in this study. Previous research has shown that tree frogs change from a crouch...

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