A study from the University of California, Davis, found that temperature affects the sound and quality of male frogs' mating ...
Climate change could be remixing the beat at the pond. A new study from UC Davis researchers, who listened closely to a male frog’s mating call, found that warmer temperatures lead to a faster beat, ...
It’s frog-eat-frog in the amphibian dating game. An ecologist has captured the moment a female green and golden bell frog attempted to eat a male suitor. Dr. John Gould, from the University of ...
In A Nutshell: Male frog calls change with water temperature: Warmer water produces faster, shorter calls while cold water ...
Frog mating calls change with temperature and may signal when ponds are safe for breeding, offering insight into climate change.
While “ghosting” is a popular method of ending a relationship with a potential suitor for humans, female frogs take that concept to the next level. In a phenomenon dubbed “tonic immobility,” a recent ...
Climate change may be giving frogs a helping hand in the language of love, a new study has found. Researchers from University of California, Davis, have discovered that temperature plays a key role in ...
Adult green and golden bell frog female consuming other frog species on Kooragang Island, north of Sydney, Australia. It's frog-eat-frog in the amphibian dating game. An ecologist has captured the ...
Some frog and toad species are explosive breeders. This means they have short reproductive periods, requiring them to gather in large numbers to mate. Hundreds, possibly even thousands, of animals ...
When the time is right, a good love song can make all the difference.