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. 2010 Jun 23;6(3):293-6.
doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.0934. Epub 2010 Jan 27.

Building a home from foam--túngara frog foam nest architecture and three-phase construction process

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Building a home from foam--túngara frog foam nest architecture and three-phase construction process

Laura Dalgetty et al. Biol Lett. .

Abstract

Frogs that build foam nests floating on water face the problems of over-dispersion of the secretions used and eggs being dangerously exposed at the foam : air interface. Nest construction behaviour of túngara frogs, Engystomops pustulosus, has features that may circumvent these problems. Pairs build nests in periodic bursts of foam production and egg deposition, three discrete phases being discernible. The first is characterized by a bubble raft without egg deposition and an approximately linear increase in duration of mixing events with time. This phase may reduce initial over-dispersion of foam precursor materials until a critical concentration is achieved. The main building phase is marked by mixing events and start-to-start intervals being nearly constant in duration. During the final phase, mixing events do not change in duration but intervals between them increase in an exponential-like fashion. Pairs joining a colonial nesting abbreviate their initial phase, presumably by exploiting a pioneer pair's bubble raft, thereby reducing energy and material expenditure, and time exposed to predators. Finally, eggs are deposited only in the centre of nests with a continuously produced, approximately 1 cm deep egg-free cortex that protectively encloses hatched larvae in stranded nests.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Three-phase nest building in singleton and colonial nestings. (a) Duration of mixing events throughout a typical nesting, the linear rising phase defining phase 1 corresponding to the initiation, bubble raft phase merging into the main building phase 2. Linear regression lines fitted from event numbers 0 to 50, and from event 50 to termination. (b) Time intervals between the beginnings of each mixing event for the same nesting. Phase 3—termination phase. The fitted lines are a linear regression from event 25 to 180, and an exponential fit from point 180 to the end. (ce) Duration of mixing events in colonial nesting. (c) Pioneer pair; (d,e) follower pairs. Event numbers given from the beginning of nesting by the pioneer pair. All times are expressed in seconds (s).
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Nest structure and refuge. (a) Singleton nest built in the laboratory. (b) Nest sectioned vertically through its centre, lit from below showing egg-free cortex. (c) Laboratory and (d) wild-collected nests placed on a dry Petri dish, incubated for three days until hatching is complete, viewed from below.

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