Abstract

CERTAIN COLOMBIAN POIson-dart frogs and New Guinea songbirds harbor poisonous batrachotoxins that help protect them against predators. For years, scientists have suspected that the creatures were getting the neurotoxic steroidal alkaloids from a dietary source, but that source has remained mysterious. Until now. John P. Dumbacher, of the California Academy of Sciences, in San Francisco, and colleagues report that the little-studied family of Melyridae beetles contain batrachotoxins in high concentrations [ Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA , 101 , 15857 (2004)]. The tiny beetles, which are a little larger than a grain of rice, fall within the size range of other insects that the poisonous frogs and birds are known to snack on. Also, the cosmopolitan insects or their relatives are known to live in the same regions of Colombia and New Guinea as the frogs and birds. The team drew a direct link between the bird and the beetle when they identified a member of the melyrid ...

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