dcsimg

Description

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Medium-sized species with slender appearance. 22-29 mm. Head and anterior part of dorsum covered by a sharply delimited yellow/green marking, posteriorly either ending semicircularly or prolonged as a pointed triangle to the cloacal region (not corresponding to sexual dimorphism). Flanks and posterior part of dorsum black. Arms and legs usually black, rarely copper brown. Hands and finger tips often with blue spots. No frenal stripe, but single yellowish spots sometimes present under the eyes. Iris black without light pigment. Venter with small blue or greyish spots, throat generally black without pattern. No red, orange or yellow pattern on hindlimbs. Similar species: M. betsileo, M. viridis and M. expectata differ by having blue spots on the throat, less extended terminal finger disks and usually a light line along the upper lip. Mantella sp. is similar in colouration but lacks extended finger disks and has a frenal stripe.Taken with permission from Glaw and Vences (2007).This species was featured as News of the Week on January 21, 2020: Parenting is an uncommon strategy among amphibians to raise offspring, and rarely takes the form of intense care compared to other vertebrates. For example, when species diversified and gained new niches to avoid competition for the same resources, maternal provisioning provides evolutionary benefits to surpass the cost of reduced access to nutrients. Fischer et al. 2019 demonstrated that in addition to supplying nutrients to offspring living in small isolated pools of water, maternal provisioning of unfertilized eggs is a way of passing along chemical defenses in some aposematic and poisonous frogs species. This mechanism of toxin transfer convergently evolved in two distant clades of frogs living in the antipodes, the Malagasy Climbing Mantella (Mantella laevigata) and the Ecuadorian Little Devil Poison Frog (Oophaga sylvatica), which diverged roughly 140 million years ago. Further, they showed that the neuronal basis of their maternal behavior relies on similar brain region activities but with distinct activation patterns, suggesting an evolutionary versatility in the molecular mechanisms sustaining maternal provisioning (Written by Alexandre Roland).

Reference

Andreone, F. and Glaw, F. (2008). Mantella laevigata. In: IUCN 2008. 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. www.iucnredlist.org. Downloaded on 21 April 2009.

license
cc-by-3.0
author
Miguel Vences
author
Frank Glaw
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Distribution and Habitat

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Ambavala, Ambodimanga (Mananara), Folohy, Marojejy, Nosy Mangabe, Tsararano. It occurs from sea level to 600m asl in rainforest, bamboo forest, and other types of forest with abundant tree holes (in which it breeds) (Andreone and Vences 2008).
license
cc-by-3.0
author
Miguel Vences
author
Frank Glaw
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Habits: Adults were found on the forest floor, climbing up to 4 m on trees, and in water-filled tree-holes or bamboo nodes. In these tree-holes up to six (but mostly two) adults were present together. When disturbed they often submerged underwater. Aggressive behaviour was not observed. Height of the tree-holes ranged from 10-350 cm above the forest floor, and tree-hole size was very variable (depth up to 30 cm, diameter 3-12 cm). Calls were heard throughout the day. No individuals were heard or found at night, neither on the ground nor in the tree-holes. Sympatric species found in the same tree-holes were Platypelis grandis, Plethodontohyla notosticta and Anodonthyla boulengeri. Stomachs of dissected specimens contained many small ants and termites, and some flies. Reproduction is unique among Mantella: Rather large white eggs are deposited singly 1-2 cm above the water surface of tree-holes (not protected against daylight). Sometimes eggs dry out with descending water-levels and some eggs disappear. Embryonic development is visible two days after egg-laying. Eggs found underwater on the bottom did not show any development. Eggs were observed in October and March. This fact indicates, as well as the different sizes of tadpoles and juveniles, an extended breeding period. Tree-holes were populated by one tadpole, or by two tadpoles in different developmental stages. The tadpoles have a reduced number of labial denticles and a strong horny beak. They feed on fertilized conspecific eggs or are actively fed by the mother with unfertilized eggs. Occasionally they might eat the eggs of other frog species (especially the treehole-breeding cophylines). In the absence of eggs, tadpoles are omnivorous. Calls: Series of short double-click notes, similar to species of the M. betsileo group.
license
cc-by-3.0
author
Miguel Vences
author
Frank Glaw
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

provided by AmphibiaWeb articles
Near Threatened: extent of occurrence is probably not much greater than 20,000 km2, and the extent and quality of its habitat are probably declining, thus making the species close to qualifying for Vulnerable. This species occurs in several protected areas, and is also maintained and bred in several facilities outside Madagascar (Andreone and Vences 2008).
license
cc-by-3.0
author
Miguel Vences
author
Frank Glaw
original
visit source
partner site
AmphibiaWeb articles

Climbing mantella

provided by wikipedia EN

The climbing mantella (Mantella laevigata) is a species of diurnal poison frog of the genus Mantella that resides in the subtropical regions of northeast Madagascar. Although it spends a significant amount of time in trees or bamboo forests, this frog species is not fully terrestrial and actively seeks areas with a water source.

Like others in the Mantella genus, the climbing mantella has aposematic coloration, which warns predators of its toxic secretions. The lipophilic alkaloids, the building blocks of the poison, are derived from dietary arthropods. The climbing mantella consumes a variety of small insects, and its diet changes dramatically with varying seasons.

Climbing mantella engage in unique reproductive behaviors that revolve around arboreal oviposition sites. Males compete with one another over the shallow pools of water where females lay their eggs. Climbing mantella exhibit a high degree of parental care, which is unusual among frogs.

Description

Considered a small frog, adult climbing mantella range from 24–30 millimetres (0.94–1.18 in) and weigh 1.2–2.0 grams (0.042–0.071 oz). Like other poison frogs, the climbing mantella is brightly colored. The anterior portion of its back is bright yellow or pale green. The arms, legs, abdomen, and posterior are black, with blue spots on the limbs. Its eyes are completely black. The climbing mantella has discs at the tip of its fingers and toes, which are webbed. The males are slightly smaller than the females, but it is difficult to identify the frog's sex using physical characteristics. Males are best recognized by their mating calls.[2]

Species that resemble this frog are M. betsileo, M. viridis, and M. expectata; however, these frogs are differently colored and often have blue spots on their throats rather than limbs. Unlike the climbing mantella, these species have a faint line running along their upper lip.[2]

Habitat and distribution

The climbing mantella is found in the northeast coastal region of Madagascar in lowland rainforests and bamboo groves.[2] This species can be found in several protected areas of Madagascar, including Mananara-Nord National Park, Marojejy National Park, Masoala National Park, Nosy Mangabe Special Reserve, and Betampona Natural Reserve.[3] The favorable humidity level is 80% to 100%. Climbing mantella can withstand a 17–30 °C (63–86 °F) temperature range, which is relatively large compared to other amphibian species. However, the most suitable temperature level is 20–26 °C (68–79 °F).[2]

Conservation

The International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species (IUCN Red List) listed the climbing mantella as least concern in 2016, due to its wide geographical distribution and presumed large population. The IUCN Red List previously listed it as near-threatened in 2004 and 2008.[3]

Despite its listing, the climbing mantella population is suspected to be decreasing. Regions of Madagascar outside of protected reserves are at increased risk of deforestation. Greater demand for cattle grazing areas, farmland, and space to build cities may jeopardize the climbing mantella’s natural habitat.[3] Currently, the international pet trade levels for this frog species do not present a serious threat to the population, though continued trade regulation is necessary to maintain local populations of climbing mantella.[4]

Taxonomy

The climbing mantella belongs to the family Mantellidae and the genus Mantella. Mantellidae are endemic to the islands of Madagascar and Mayotte. The climbing mantella's closest relative is likely the green mantella (M. viridis). [5]

Diet

Climbing mantella eat ants, insect larvae, mites, and other insects. Unlike similar frogs from the family Dendrobatidae, the climbing mantella is not an ant specialist; its food consumption volume and diet composition vary dramatically based on seasonality. Climbing mantella do not seem to prefer a specific type of prey and consume whatever is readily available in leaf litter.[6]

Ants comprise approximately 84% of the frog’s diet during the dry season, but only 35% during the wet season. Over half of all consumed ants were of the genus Pheidole. During the dry season, climbing mantella consume approximately 44% more in absolute volume compared to the wet season. Overall, climbing mantella have a more varied diet during the wet season. Wet-season frogs consume significantly more insect larvae, mites, and other arthropods (including spiders and small beetles) compared to dry season counterparts. Diet shifts may be a result of varying prey availability during seasons, rather than specific behavioral changes.[6]

Climbing mantella tadpoles will consume unfertilized or fertilized eggs of their own species. Tadpoles are only known to consume conspecific eggs, and ignore mosquitoes or other small arthropod larvae.[7]

Mating

Group of climbing mantella in a bamboo stalk well.

Male-male competition

Males compete with one another for territory. Fighting bouts over territory take the form of wrestling, chasing, and leaping. These conflicts last anywhere from 10 seconds to over 1.5 hours. The resident male, usually the aggressor, typically wins the fight. When not in their own territory, male frogs will infrequently invade the territory of other males, hoping to mate with more females. On rare occasions, the intruder can convince females to mate in a well possessed by another male. If the territory resident discovers the intruder, the intruder can either initiate a fighting bout or submissively yield to amplexus. Resident males will not attempt to mate with an unresponsive frog, and the resident will leave the submitted invader after a couple of minutes.[7]

Female-male interactions

Although it is the only semi-arboreal member of the Mantella genus, the forest environment plays an important role in the climbing mantella’s reproductive behavior.[8] Males are highly territorial, claiming a given area of approximately 2 square metres (22 sq ft). Each territory contains at least one water-filled well (phytotelmata; often found in tree holes or broken bamboo stalks), and male frogs defend these possible oviposition sites from their rivals. Male climbing mantella choose wells based on the presence of crane flies, which prey on frog eggs, and other frog species. A greater amount of crane flies and other frog species correlates to a less desirable well.[7]

Female frogs will approach male frogs who advertise their territory with a two-tone call.[2] Female frogs are either mute or have weak calls.[9] Upon hearing the mating calls, female frogs will approach the well occupied by males. The male frog adopts a softer single-note courtship call, and the female frog proceeds to judge the well. The mating calls only attract female frogs to the male’s territory, and have no bearing on mate selection. Instead, mate selection from the perspective of the female is entirely based on the quality of the male’s well. Female frogs frequently abandon a male frog after inspecting the location. Thus, well sites are a limiting resource.[9] The most desirable well sites often have eggs from multiple different mating pairs.[7] The climbing mantella is the only member of the Mantella genus to use phytotelmata for breeding purposes.[10]

Parental care

Egg-laying

Climbing mantella usually only lay one large large egg (3–3.5 millimetres (0.12–0.14 in)), characteristics common among frogs with a high degree of parental care. Female frogs lay their eggs at the side of wells or above the water line, exhibiting a form of terrestrial oviposition–another indicator of high parental investment.[7] The climbing mantella is the only member of the genus Mantella where parent frogs care for oophagous tadpoles.[10]

Site selection for egg-laying

Female climbing mantella engage in trophic egg laying, and care for their young by feeding them their unfertilized eggs (a behavior known as oophagy). When engaging in maternal care, female frogs ignore male mating calls and climb wells alone, depositing their unfertilized eggs at or below the water line in the well. The tadpole that resides in the well will then consume the trophic eggs. It is believed that maternal care is not obligatory, depending more on circumstance and environment than natural behavior.[7]

Territory defense as paternal care

Male territorial defense is also considered a form of paternal care. The presence of a male climbing mantella in a well dissuades other species of frogs (esp. Plethodontohyla notostica and Anodonthyla boulengeri) from laying their eggs there. It is also possible that male frogs discourage land crabs, which have been observed from eating climbing mantella eggs, from entering wells.

Males also engage in parental care considered to be reproductive parasitism. If a male possesses a desirable well containing one of his offspring, he will always benefit: a male’s reproductive success increases with each reproductive event, because it either produces another one of his offspring or results in the creation of a new egg that will feed his existing offspring. Thus, males will often take females to wells that already contain their developing eggs or tadpoles.[7]

Reproductive parasitism

Both male and female frogs contribute to the tadpole’s sole diet of conspecific eggs. Female frogs will lay unfertilized eggs into wells that contain their offspring. Male frogs exhibit a form of reproductive parasitism by luring female frogs to wells that often contain offspring only belonging to the male. Any fertilized egg resulting from the courtship subsequently serves as food for tadpoles that are only related to the male. Female frogs develop mechanisms to defend themselves against parasitism and avoid laying their eggs in wells containing other tadpoles. In response, tadpoles evolve ways to evade detection by females.[7]

Defense

The evolution of chemical defense in members of the genus Mantella (including the climbing mantella) is an exceptional example of convergent evolution. Dendrobatidae and Mantella have developed similar behavioral and physiological adaptations, despite being relatively unrelated.[6]

Poisonous lipophilic alkaloids stored in skin glands are the effective defensive chemicals. 41 different potent alkaloids have been found in climbing mantellas' skin. Captive frogs lose their toxicity over time, indicating that the climbing mantella’s wild diet of arthropods contains the chemicals needed to construct the alkaloids. Alkaloids are retained in frogs for long periods of time, and thus the link between seasonality and alkaloid composition is still unclear. While some researchers have found that seasonality plays a significant role in the absence or presence of alkaloids, other studies show that this did not lead to dramatic changes in climbing mantellas' overall alkaloid profile.[6]

References

  1. ^ IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2016). "Mantella laevigata". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T57445A84167090. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T57445A84167090.en. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Furrer, S., and R. Franz. "Husbandry guideline for Mantella laevigata (Methuen & Hewitt 1913)." EAZA Amphibian TAG (2008).
  3. ^ a b c IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2016). "Mantella laevigata". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T57445A84167090. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T57445A84167090.en
  4. ^ Andreone, Franco, and Luca Maria Luiselli. "Conservation priorities and potential threats influencing the hyper‐diverse amphibians of Madagascar." Italian Journal of Zoology 70.1 (2003): 53-63.
  5. ^ CHIARI, Y.; VENCES, M.; VIEITES, D. R.; RABEMANANJARA, F.; BORA, P.; RAMILIJAONA RAVOAHANGIMALALA, O.; MEYER, A. (2004-11-15). "New evidence for parallel evolution of colour patterns in Malagasy poison frogs (Mantella)". Molecular Ecology. 13 (12): 3763–3774. doi:10.1111/j.1365-294x.2004.02367.x. ISSN 0962-1083.
  6. ^ a b c d Moskowitz, Nora A., et al. "Seasonal changes in diet and chemical defense in the Climbing Mantella frog (Mantella laevigata)." PloS one 13.12 (2018): e0207940.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Heying, Heather E. "Social and reproductive behaviour in the Madagascan poison frog, Mantella laevigata, with comparisons to the dendrobatids." Animal Behaviour 61.3 (2001): 567-577.
  8. ^ Andreone, Franco, et al. "Living within fallen palm leaves: the discovery of an unknown Blommersia (Mantellidae: Anura) reveals a new reproductive strategy in the amphibians of Madagascar." Naturwissenschaften 97.6 (2010): 525-543.
  9. ^ a b Heying, Heather Elizabeth. The evolutionary ecology and sexual selection of a Madagascan poison frog (Mantella laevigata). University of Michigan, 2001.
  10. ^ a b Lehtinen, Richard M. "Ecology and evolution of phytotelm-breeding anurans." (2004)
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN

Climbing mantella: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The climbing mantella (Mantella laevigata) is a species of diurnal poison frog of the genus Mantella that resides in the subtropical regions of northeast Madagascar. Although it spends a significant amount of time in trees or bamboo forests, this frog species is not fully terrestrial and actively seeks areas with a water source.

Like others in the Mantella genus, the climbing mantella has aposematic coloration, which warns predators of its toxic secretions. The lipophilic alkaloids, the building blocks of the poison, are derived from dietary arthropods. The climbing mantella consumes a variety of small insects, and its diet changes dramatically with varying seasons.

Climbing mantella engage in unique reproductive behaviors that revolve around arboreal oviposition sites. Males compete with one another over the shallow pools of water where females lay their eggs. Climbing mantella exhibit a high degree of parental care, which is unusual among frogs.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN