Ranita de Darwin

Rhinoderma darwinii

English name 4

Darwin's frog

General information 4

Named after Charles Darwin, who had described the frog during his world voyage on HMS Beagle (1831-1836)
Endemic to Chile and some parts of Argentina
Listed as endandered (IUCN) mainly because of habitat loss and degradation, largely from conversion of native forests to tree plantations
Tadpoles' development inside the vocal sac of the male
Relies on camouflage to avoid predators, lying on the ground looking like a dead leaf
Short documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVwAcTgHi7s

Could be seen... 4

in Huilo Huilo
in Futangue
(if you are very lucky)

Reproduction 5

The female Darwin's frog lays up to forty eggs among the leaf litter. The male guards them for about three to four weeks until the developing embryos begin to move, and then he ingests the eggs and holds them in his vocal sac. They hatch about three days later and he continues to carry the tadpoles around in his vocal sac where they feed off their egg yolks and secretions produced by the wall of the sac until metamorphosis. At this stage, about 6 weeks after being swallowed(a duration in which the adult male eats nothing[8]), the small frogs hop out of the male's mouth and disperse.

Fontes e Créditos

  1. (c) Mono Andes, alguns direitos reservados (CC BY-SA), http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rhinoderma_darwinii.jpg
  2. Sem direitos reservados, uploaded by Andrew J. Crawford
  3. (c) Diego Alarcón, alguns direitos reservados (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Diego Alarcón
  4. (c) Alice Roy-Bolduc, alguns direitos reservados (CC BY-SA)
  5. Adaptado por Alice Roy-Bolduc de uma obra de (c) Wikipedia, alguns direitos reservados (CC BY-SA), https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinoderma_darwinii

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