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English Version

March 22, 2012

Modeling Anuran Detection and Site Occupancy on North American Amphibian Monitoring Program (NAAMP) Routes in Maryland

Linda A. Weir, J. Andrew Royle, Priya Nanjappa and Robin E. Jung

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Abstract: One of the most fundamental problems in monitoring animal populations is that of imperfect detection. Although imperfect detection can be modeled, studies examining patterns in occurrence often ignore detection and thus fail to properly partition variation in detection from that of occurrence. In this study, we used anuran calling survey data collected on North American Amphibian Monitoring Program routes in eastern Maryland to investigate factors that influence detection probability and site occupancy for 10 anuran species. In 2002, 17 calling survey routes in eastern Maryland were surveyed to collect environmental and species data nine or more times. To analyze these data, we developed models incorporating detection probability and site occupancy. The results suggest that, for more than half of the 10 species, detection probabilities vary most with season (i.e., day-of-year), air temperature, time, and moon illumination, whereas site occupancy may vary by the amount of palustrine forested wetland habitat. Our results suggest anuran calling surveys should document air temperature,  time of night, moon illumination, observer skill, and habitat change over time, as these factors can be important to model-adjusted estimates of site occupancy. Our study represents the first formal modeling effort aimed at developing an analytic assessment framework for NAAMP calling survey data.

March 20, 2012

Visual Signaling in Anuran Amphibians

Walter Hödl and Adolfo Amézquita

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Chapter 10 of Anuran Communication.

March 15, 2012

THE EFFECT OF SOCIAL INTERACTIONS ON ANURAN VOCAL BEHAVIOR

Kentwood D. Wells

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Chapter 20 of The Evolution of the Amphibian Auditory System

A FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE MATING CALLS OF THE NEOTROPICAL FROG GENERA OF THE LEPTODACTYLUS COMPLEX (AMPHIBIA, LEPTODACTYLIDAE)

Ian R. Straughan and W. Ronald Heyer

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Abstract: Functional characteristics or design features of mating calls for 19 species in the complex are given and analysed for patterns of relationship and convergences due to functional constraints. Two basic ' mating
call patterns can be defined. The first, a quiet, incessant popping produced by exploding a burst of air through the glottis usually with little amplification by secondary structures, is characteristic of riparian species that call resident females over short distances. The second call consists of a single tone burst (note) produced by passing a pulsed stream, of air through the glottis. Often a change in tension of laryngeal musculature produces frequency modulation through the note. In the latter call, resonance in the vocal sacs provides finer frequency tuning and better radiation of the call for attracting females over much longer distances. Patterns of structural similarities in calls are consistent with relationships based on morphology in some instances and apparently contradict morphological evidence in others, indicating that convergence in mating call characters may occur.

March 14, 2012

Pseudacris regilla


On 12/03/2012, the G1 news portal published an article about a frog, Pacific Tree Frog (Pseudacris regilla), immune disease chytridiomycosis, caused by the chytrid fungus. The information was extracted from a paper by San Francisco Satate University  researchers (California, USA) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America journal (PNAS).

The
chytrid fungus causes the disease chytridiomycosis, has the ability to parasitize widely vertebrates. Specifically on the amphibians, the fungus has been considered one of the most likely causes of the decline of world populations, having wiped out more than 200 species of amphibians worldwide.

Pseudacris regilla is a endemic specie to the U.S. and very abundant. Individuals can contract the fungus, but  symptoms do not occur even in individuals with high levels of infection. Because it is abundant and a reservoir of the parasite, Pseudacris regilla may jeopardize the existence of other sympatric species susceptible to the fungus, spreading the deadly disease. The next step for researchers is to understand the biochemical mechanisms which exist in this specie make it immune to the fungus.