Abstract

Recent reviews on sexual dichromatism in frogs included Mannophryne trinitatis as the only example they could find of dynamic dichromatism (males turn black when calling) within the family Aromobatidae and found no example of ontogenetic dichromatism in this group. We demonstrate ontogenetic dichromatism in M. trinitatis by rearing post-metamorphic froglets to near maturity: the throats of all individuals started as grey coloured; at around seven weeks, the throat became pale yellow in some, and more strongly yellow as development proceeded; the throats of adults are grey in males and variably bright yellow in females, backed by a dark collar. We demonstrated the degree of throat colour variability by analysing a large sample of females. The red: green (R:G) ratio ranged from ~1.1 to 1.4, reflecting variation from yellow to yellow/orange, and there was also variation in the tone and width of the dark collar, and in the extent to which the yellow colouration occurred posterior to the collar. Female M. trinitatis are known to be territorial in behaviour. We show a positive relationship between throat colour (R:G ratio) and escape performance, as a proxy for quality. Our field observations on Tobago's M. olmonae showed variability in female throat colour and confirmed that males in this species also turn black when calling. Our literature review of the 20 Mannophryne species so far named showed that all females have yellow throats with dark collars, and that male colour change to black when calling has been reported in eight species; in the remaining 12 species, descriptions of males calling are usually lacking so far. We predict that both dynamic and ontogenetic sexual dichromatism are universal in this genus and provide discussion of the ecological role of dichromatism in this genus of predominantly diurnal, non-toxic frogs, with strong paternal care of offspring.

Highlights

  • Most anuran amphibians are active mainly at night and intra-specific communication is mainly mediated by acoustic signals [1]

  • We report on the occurrence of both dynamic and ontogenetic sexual dichromatism in frogs of the neotropical genus Mannophryne

  • We focus on sexual dichromatism in two species, M. trinitatis and M. olmonae, and review literature reports from other Mannophryne species

Read more

Summary

Methods

Females, recognised by having yellow throats, were caught either by hand or with the aid of small handnets and placed for transport into small polyethylene bags containing a little damp forest leaf litter. They were kept overnight in a holding tank furnished with damp leaf litter, at the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine. The frogs were photographed and measured (snoutvent length [SVL] to 0.1 mm using dial callipers) on the day after collection, and returned to their collection sites within ~20m of capture location. Capturing and returning the frogs should not risk spreading infection

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call