Abstract

Over a narrow temperature range (25.5–28 °C), metamorphic duration in 14 taxonomically diverse frog species ranged from 2.0 to 7.3 days. For 12 species, duration was significantly related to tadpole body-size parameters, especially tail length. For the remainder, duration was longer than expected. Two patterns of tail regression were seen with either rapid or slow regression at the start. Most species lost about 30% of body wet weight during metamorphosis, but two were exceptional: X. laevis lost 58% and F. fitzgeraldi 13%. The results are discussed in the context of Wassersug & Sperry’s (1977) hypothesis that selection acts to minimize metamorphic duration because metamorphosis is a highly vulnerable stage. Several other factors are outlined as possible determinants of metamorphic duration: developmental constraints, functional trade-offs, phylogeny, predator abundance, adaptive de-coupling, body condition and metabolic and water costs. There is evidence from the data for the operation of several of these factors, especially in species utilizing specialized habitats, and a plea is made for further study of metamorphic duration as an ecologically and evolutionarily important variable in amphibian life histories. Finally, the effects of different temperatures on metamorphic duration are presented for several species, and discussed in terms of local adaptation and reaction norms. © 2004 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2004, 83, 261–272.

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