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The Adaptive Significance of Egg Attendance in a South‐East Asian Tree Frog
43
Citations
60
References
2013
Year
BiologyBreeding BehaviorParental CareReproductive SuccessAnimal BehaviourArboreal FrogNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyEgg AttendanceInterspecific Behavioral InteractionHarsh Environmental ConditionsAdaptive SignificanceReproductive BiologyReproduction ResponseAnimal BehaviorComparative Physiology
Abstract The arboreal frog, C hiromantis hansenae ( F amily: R hacophoridae), is one of only a handful of S outh‐ E ast Asian amphibian species reported with parental care. We present the first systematic observational and experimental study confirming offspring benefits as a result of this care, which has a number of unusual life‐history characteristics. Eggs are unusually small, breeding takes place in large pools, and females attend the eggs. Field observations and an adult removal experiment demonstrated a critical contribution of egg attendance to offspring survivorship. Harsh environmental conditions for offspring appeared to be the prime mover of parental care in this species, with desiccation as the main source of mortality when attending adults are absent. Results confirm females to be the caregivers, making C. hansenae a rare case of maternal egg attendance in a non‐directly developing anuran.
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