Date: June 16, 2016
Source: Smithsonian Tropical
Research Institute
Although red-eyed tree frog
embryos appear helpless within their jelly-coated eggs, they can hatch up to
two days ahead of schedule, reacting within seconds to attacks by egg thieves.
At the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) in Panama, scientists
used high-speed video to uncover their rapid-hatching secret.
"Most people think of
embryos as fairly passive," said Karen Warkentin, STRI research associate
and professor at Boston University. "But evidence keeps accumulating that
embryos of many species are actively engaged with their world, not only
receiving information but also using it to do things that help them
survive."
This is particularly true of the
embryos of red-eyed tree frogs (Agalychnis
callidryas). Native to Neotropical rainforests, adult frogs live in trees
and lay clusters of 40 or so eggs on leaves, branches or other structures that
overhang ponds or streams. Left undisturbed, tadpoles hatch after a week's
development inside the gooey egg mass and drop into the water below. But the
eggs are often attacked by hungry snakes or wasps and are also vulnerable to
sudden environmental events like floods or heavy downpours. Developing embryos
are able to assess the level of threat and have evolved a quick-release
mechanism to escape the egg prematurely.
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