Dyeing poison dart frog

species of amphibian
(Redirected from Dendrobates tinctorius)

The tinging frog, dyeing poison arrow frog, dyeing poison frog, blue poison frog, blue poison arrow frog, or giant poison frog (Dendrobates tinctorius) is a frog that lives in Guyana, French Guiana, Suriname, and Brazil.[3][1][2]

Dyeing poison dart frog
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Dendrobatidae
Genus: Dendrobates
Species:
D. tinctorius
Binomial name
Dendrobates tinctorius
(Cuvier, 1797)
Synonyms[3]
  • Rana tinctoria (Cuvier, 1797)
  • Calamita tinctorius (Schneider, 1799)
  • Hyla tinctoria (Daudin, 1800)
  • Rana tinctoria (Shaw, 1802)
  • Calamita tinctorius (Merrem, 1820)
  • Hylaplesia tinctoria (Boie in Schlegel, 1826)
  • Dendrobates tinctorius (Wagler, 1830)
  • Dendrobates tinctorius var. daudini (Steindachner, 1864)
  • Dendrobates machadoi (Bokermann, 1958)
  • Dendrobates azureus (Hoogmoed, 1969)
  • Dendrobates tinctorum (Silverstone, 1975)
  • Dendrobates tinctorius azureus (Ouboter and Jairam, 2012)

Appearance change

For some time, scientists thought this frog was two species: Dendrobates azureus and Dendrobates tinctorius. Now they know it is one species that can be two different colors. These two types of frog in the same species are called morphs. The blue color morph (azureus) is bright blue-black legs and back, light blue sides, a light blue belly with spots, and spots on its head and back. Sometimes it has a dark stripe on its belly. The other morph has yellow color on its body. The adult male frog has bigger disks on its toes for climbing than adult female frogs have. Both frogs are poisonous, but the blue frogs have more poison than the yellow ones.[1]

Scientists studied the colors on this frog using computers with a learning algorithm. They wanted to know how different predators, for example humans, reptiles, and birds, could see the frog against the dead leaves on the ground. They found that, at a short distance, frogs of both color morphs were easy to see. But further away, both color morphs were hard to see. Both the blue and yellow colors acted like camouflage. Scientists think that, because the frog is poisonous, it has bright colors to tell any nearby predator not to eat it.[1]

Home change

This frog lives in forests that are not too high above sea level. These forests have rocky streams and water in the air.

Actions change

The adult male frog sits on the ground or on leaves and sings for the female frog. The female frog comes near the male frog and touches his nose. Then the male leads the female to a body of water, where she lays 2 to 6 eggs. Usually, the male frog guards the eggs until they hatch. Sometimes the female frog does. The eggs take 14 to 18 days to hatch into tadpoles. Then the male and female frogs carry them away. They take the tadpoles to small bodies of water, for example in the leaves of a bromeliad plant. The frogs take them very far away. Sometimes the parent frogs will walk right past other pools of water to get to ones further away. Scientists think it is good for the frog's survival to spread out over a wide distance so the new frogs will not have to fight each other for food as much.[1]

Inside the new body of water, the tadpoles fight. Sometimes they eat each other. Usually, only one tadpole per body of water lives to become a new frog. But sometimes there are two. Scientists studied the fighting tadpoles. They found that when one tadpole was much bigger than the other, they usually did not fight. They believe this is because both tadpoles knew who would lose. They also found that when two tadpoles in the same pool had the same parents, they only fought half as often as tadpoles that were not related to each other.[4][5]

References change

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Franziska Sandmeier (December 29, 2006). Kellie Whittaker; Ann T. Chang (eds.). "Dendrobates tinctorius". Amphibiaweb. University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved March 28, 2022.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Gaucher, P.; MacCulloch, R. (2010). "Continental Divide Treefrog: Dendrobates tinctorius". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 3.1: e.T55204A11265402. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2010-2.RLTS.T55204A11265402.en. 55204. Retrieved March 28, 2022.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Dendrobates tinctorius (Myers and Duellman, 1982)". Amphibian Species of the World 6.0, an Online Reference. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved March 28, 2022.
  4. University of Jyväskylä - Jyväskylän yliopisto (March 28, 2022). "May the odds be in your favor: Relatedness and size interact in shaping cannibal aggression" (Press release). Eurekalert.
  5. Chloe A Fouilloux; Lutz Fromhage; Janne K Valkonen; Bibiana Rojas (March 25, 2022). "Size-dependent aggression towards kin in a cannibalistic species". Behavioral Ecology. 33 (3): 582–591. doi:10.1093/beheco/arac020. PMC 9113263. PMID 35592877.