Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,060,410 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Single singing male toad seeks same.


It's Saturday night down at the old mill pond a pond that supplies the water for a mill.

See also: Mill
, and gaggles of lonely anurans are looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 love. A question vexes researchers: Why the crowd? Each male would seem to have better odds of mating by setting off on his own. But males of Spea multiplicata and Spea bombifrons--spadefoot toad species that interbreed--sit in a flotilla that's a veritable fraternity row of bachelor lily pads.

One easy answer is the same reason college boys can be found on Daytona Beach Daytona Beach (dātō`nə), city (1990 pop. 61,921), Volusia co., NE Fla., on the Atlantic coast and Halifax River (a lagoon); inc. 1876. Center of a rapidly urbanizing area, in a region settled by Spanish Franciscans in the 17th cent.  in April: It's where the girls are. But there's more to it than that, claim Karin S. Pfennig of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public, coeducational, research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States. Also known as The University of North Carolina, Carolina, North Carolina, or simply UNC  and her colleagues in the June BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY sociobiology, controversial field that studies how natural selection, previously used only to explain the evolution of physical characteristics, shapes behavior in animals and humans. . Males are, at least in some cases, drawn to each other to win females.

To investigate the gregariousness, Pfennig's team placed S. multiplicata males between two speakers at the edge of a wading pool. One speaker broadcast calls from males of the same species; the other, calls from S. bombifrons. Next, Pfennig played calls at either average frequency for S. multiplicata, 31 calls per minute, or a less typical rate of 37 calls per minute. Earlier studies had shown that females prefer average calls.

Of 27 S. multiplicata males tested, 22 swam to the speaker broadcasting the calls of their own kind. In the contest between average and fast calling rates, smaller males chose the slower-frequency speaker, while larger males preferred the faster-frequency one, which more resembles the call of S. bombifrons.

Males evaluate each other's calls, suggests Pfennig, because female S. multiplicata face a mating pitfall pit·fall  
n.
1. An unapparent source of trouble or danger; a hidden hazard: "potential pitfalls stemming from their optimistic inflation assumptions" New York Times.
. If they breed with the S. bombifrons, the offspring hybrid males will be sterile and the females, only partially fecund fe·cund
adj.
Capable of producing offspring; fertile.
. And spadefoot toads, observes Carl Gerhardt, a biologist at the University of Missouri in Columbia, "are notorious for trying to mate with any other frog of comparable size that moves near them."

Males can help solve the hybridization hybridization /hy·brid·iza·tion/ (hi?brid-i-za´shun)
1. crossbreeding; the act or process of producing hybrids.

2. molecular hybridization

3.
 problem by attempting to form single-species clusters, says Pfennig. S. multiplicata males who call at the species-typical rate rather than near the faster, frequency offer additional reassurance to the would-be discriminating female.

Smaller S. multiplicata males are likely to be in poorer condition, says Pfennig, and may lack the energy reserves to do their own calling. Michael J. Ryan, a biologist at the University of Texas at Austin “University of Texas” redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System.
The University of Texas at Austin (often referred to as The University of Texas, UT Austin, UT, or Texas
, notes that Pfennig's study confirms his team's unpublished observations that the silent, punier males are drawn to calls of average frequency. "It seems to me that if you were adapting a noncalling or nondisplaying strategy, then, sure, you would want to be around a male who was very attractive to females," he says. "The way you'd get your copulations is by intercept."

The reason larger males prefer the faster calling rate is less clear, but they may be attempting to exploit the effect of contrast. "It's very difficult for a male, if he's going to call at an average call rate which is attractive to the female, to out-average average," notes Pfennig. A male who wants to stand out to a female, she speculates, might do better to find a male calling at the wrong rate and use his competitor's amatory am·a·to·ry  
adj.
Of, relating to, or expressive of love, especially sexual love: an amatory mood; an amatory embrace.



[Latin am
 ineptitude Ineptitude
See also Awkwardness.

Brown, Charlie

meek hero unable to kick a football, fly a kite, or win a baseball game. [Comics: “Peanuts” in Horn, 543]

Capt. Queeg

incompetent commander of the minesweeper Caine.
 to showcase his own savoir faire.

Pfennig concedes that her study doesn't explore additional reasons males might aggregate. Each individual, for instance, may simply be choosing the best location for food. The hypotheses for aggregation aren't mutually exclusive, however, and Ryan observes that Pfennig's study is one of the few to establish that males evaluate potential competitors using the same rules that females do.

Simply finding that males seek out other males is striking, says Pfennig, who notes that biologists often separate male competition and female choice. Males in some species compete for mates in two stages, using one set of behavior to combat other males and another for wooing. "What these results suggest," says Pfennig, "is that those two categories may not be as separate as we sometimes tend to make them."
COPYRIGHT 2000 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Bennett, R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 17, 2000
Words:665
Previous Article:Mice have a sharp nose for pheromones.(Brief Article)
Next Article:Stretched matter goes to unusual extremes.(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Jumping gender: frogs change from she to he.
Toads can't tell guys from gals.(male western toads cannot distinquish between the sexes)
Killer skin fungus nails boreal toads.(chytrid skin fungus found in boreal toads in Colorado)(in boreal toads)(Brief Article)
EFFECTS OF BODY SIZE, MEAL SIZE, AND TEMPERATURE ON THE SPECIFIC DYNAMIC ACTION OF THE TOAD, BUFO MARINUS.(Brief Article)
Fish stocking may transmit toad disease.(Brief Article)
Rainforest frogs: vanishing act? Frog populations around the world are dying off mysteriously. Can scientists save them--before it's too late?...
Frog & Toad. (Theme Unit).(Brief Article)
Feminized frogs: Herbicide disrupts sexual growth. (This Week).(Brief Article)
On the evolution of toads in the French Renaissance*.
Ozone saps toads' immune systems.(Environment)(ozone exposure impairs the macrophages function)(Brief Article)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles