Temperature is essential for the survival and development of eggs. Some anurans have evolved and developed foam nesting traits, with thermal insulation considered to be among their functions. Foam-nesting frogs tend to exhibit reproductive plasticity. For example, they oviposit on both trees and the ground. How such plasticity affects foam nest function is of major relevance and is likely related to the adaptation of foam nesting frogs. However, this has not been well studied. In this study, we examined the interaction between foam nest site, foam nest function, and egg fate using the Japanese green tree frog, , and analysed how nest site differences (arboreal or terrestrial) affect the thermal function of foam nests. We compared the thermal functions of foam nests between arboreal and terrestrial oviposition sites of . We artificially replaced half of the arboreal nests with terrestrial environments and recorded temperature in and outside of the experimental terrestrial nest and original arboreal nests. We also examined egg survival and hatching rates for all the nests. The results indicated superior heat insulation in terrestrial nests, with warmer temperatures inside than outside the nests, especially at night, which led to a high egg survival rate. Therefore, terrestrial ovipositing should be valid under cold weather conditions. This may be related to the evolutionary history of oviposition site plasticity of this genus, which originally had an arboreal oviposition trait but evolved into terrestrial site use owing to global cooling. Our novel insights into the evolution and adaptivity of foam nesting and oviposition site use in make an important contribution to animal ecology.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10926 | DOI Listing |
J Morphol
January 2025
Zoologische Staatssammlung München (ZSM-SNSB), Munich, Germany.
Booidean snakes are a diverse and widespread lineage with an intriguing evolutionary and biogeographic history. By means of cranial morphology and osteology, this study investigates the evolutionary convergence in the Neotropical genera Boa and Corallus on the one hand and the Malagasy clade comprising Acrantophis and Sanzinia on the other. We hypothesize that the mostly arboreal Corallus and Sanzinia present larger jaws and longer teeth to keep hold of the prey and resist gravity and torsional forces acting on their skull while hanging from branches, while terrestrial genera such as Acrantophis show thinner jaws with shorter teeth because they can rely on the full length of their coils to immobilize and constrict the prey together with a substrate that supports the whole of their body.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Med Sci
December 2024
The University Museum, The University of Tokyo.
The significance of forelimb morphology has been discussed with a focus on specific morphological aspects; nonetheless, the correlation of overall morphology, including various linear measurements, with respect to ecological preference and adaptation has not been extensively explored, particularly using multiple taxa. We investigated the morphological characteristics of the long bones in the forelimbs of mammalian species and their relationship with specific functional adaptations using 20 linear measurements and 22 terrestrial species from 7 orders. Principal component analysis and canonical discriminant analysis showed that the lengths of the humerus, radius, and ulna as well as the distance from the smallest width to the proximal and distal ends, and the deltoid tuberosity length distinguished four adaptations: arboreal, terrestrial, fossorial, and semi-aquatic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthropod Struct Dev
December 2024
Department of Biology, University of Graz, Universitaetsplatz 2, 8010, Graz, Austria.
Claw characteristics of oribatid mites are strongly correlated with environmental factors and these characters remain constant throughout development when immatures and adults share the same ecology and lifestyle. In the present study, claw traits of oribatid mite species with constant ecology were compared with those of species showing a clear ecological shift between juvenile and adult stage. The arboreal Sellnickia caudata and the saxicolous Niphocepheus nivalis dwell in the same microhabitat during their life-cycle, whereas immatures of the terrestrial Carabodes areolatus and Mycobates carli, as well as of the aquatic Hydrozetes lemnae, are, in contrast to their adults, endophagous, meaning they feed and burrow within lichen and plant tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Biol Anthropol
January 2025
Centre for Human Evolution Research (CHER), Natural History Museum, London, UK.
Objective: Chimpanzees are altricial in terms of their locomotor development and transition from being carried to engaging in suspensory and arboreal locomotor behaviors to eventually relying on terrestrial quadrupedalism as their main form of locomotion. Here, we consider the mechanical implications of femoral cortical bone restructuring during growth and locomotor development in wild chimpanzees.
Materials And Methods: Cortical bone structure was examined in an ontogenetic sample of wild chimpanzees from a single subspecies (P.
Ecol Evol
November 2024
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, Engineering and the Built Environment Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia.
Flight-Initiation Distance (FID)-a direct measure of an individual animal's escape response-is a widely used method to study escape ecology in fauna. The technique has primarily been applied to bird species that are active by day. Indexing the escape behaviour of nocturnal species has been limited due to the need for light to detect and observe animals which confounds behavioural responses.
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