Info from AmphibiaWeb

It’s not unheard of to find male amphibians in amplexus with an inappropriate target. Some more ridiculous examples that the AmphibiaWeb team have seen on the internet or in person included a rotting mango, shoes, and a chain of cane toads grasping a snake. Given the costs of these reproductive mistakes, Soni et al. (2024) investigated the phenomena by creating a dataset of documented misdirected amplexus. Unsurprisingly, more closely related species of similar body size and microhabitat use are more likely to be engaged in misdirected amplexus with each other. However, terrestrial and arboreal species, explosive breeders, and species found in temperate regions also have more documented cases of misdirected amplexus. These findings indicate that evolutionary relatedness, ecology, ecological niche, breeding phenology, and geography all play a role in explaining these misdirected mating attempts. And a better understanding of breeding biology can inform our conservation and management efforts, as well as enchant us.

Link to Species of the Week: https://amphibiaweb.org/cgi/amphib_query?where_genus=Bufo&where_species=bufo

Leer en Español: https://bioweb.bio/faunaweb/amphibiaweb/Noticias

Link to Soni et al. 2024: https://doi.org/10.1093/biolinnean/blae062

From the second image:

Image of the Week Bufo bufo | Common Toad | Photo by Kawa Karolina

  • ALostInquirer@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Unsurprisingly, more closely related species of similar body size and microhabitat use are more likely to be engaged in misdirected amplexus with each other.

    So…They’re similar enough that any arousal confusion is incidentally amplified? I guess they may not be similar enough for this behavior to be successful and produce increased genetic diversity among themselves, though? 🤨