LAST UPDATED ON AUGUST 25TH, 2017 AT 5:14 PM BY TIBI PUIU
An odd-looking frog that spends most its life underground and
only comes outside when its ready to mate was recently discovered in
India’s Western Ghats mountains. Its pointy snout, tiny eyes, and stumpy
limbs might look funny but the truth is this is an extremely well-adapted
creature to a life in the burrows.
Credit: JEGATH JANANI.
The frog is called Bhupathy’s purple frog (Nasikabatrachus
bhupathi), in honor of Dr. Subramaniam Bhupathy, a well known Indian
herpetologist who lost his life surveying the Western Ghats in 2014. Its
appearance is characterized by a shiny purple coat, light blue rings around
small eyes and a signature pig snout nose, according to researchers at
the Centre for Cellular and Molecular
Biology (CCMB) in Hyderabad.
With its long, fluted tongue, the frog gobbles up insects that
live underground like termites and ants. Rarely does it leave the safety of the
underground unless it rains during the monsoon season. This is the time
for mating, as evidenced by the loud calls male Bhupathy’s purple frog
bellow from under the sand in mountain streams.
In the same streams, the males court and mate with females,
which deposit the fertilized eggs. Within a day or two, these are already ready
to hatch into tadpoles. But even in this early life stage, the purple frogs are
odd.
The tadpoles have sucker-fish like mouths which they use to
cling to rocks behind waterfalls like leeches. Suspended from the wet rocks,
the tadpoles can spend up to 120 days in the torrent which is the longest the
species ever stays above ground during its whole lifespan. Once they’ve
completed their transformation, the purple frogs ready themselves for a
solitary subterranean existence, the authors reported in the journal Alytes.
The findings are even more interesting once you realize this
is only the second species in its family. The first is another purple frog
described in 2003. Both species are very distant from their closest relatives,
which live in Seychelles, likely because they had to evolve independently for
millions of years.
“We confirmed it was a different species when we bar-coded its
DNA and found that genetically it was very different from the Purple frog,” says
Ramesh K Aggarwal, chief scientist at the CCMB and one of the five
co-authors
This can only be yet another example of continental drift.
About 65 million years ago, the Indian subcontinent was part of the
ancient landmass of Gondwana before
it split away from Seychelles.
If anything, this cute purple frog gives to show just how
little we know about frogs or amphibians in general. There’s a whole world of
unknown creatures out there and we can only rejoice at the opportunity to learn
more about them on a daily basis.
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