AFRICA: Jim McGuire and some colleagues recently cut open a frog that they’d gathered and euthanized on an Indonesian island, they got quite surprise.
“Out came the tadpoles, and they were alive!” recalls McGuire, a herpetologist at the University of California, Berkeley.
The researchers had just found the first frog known to give birth to live tadpoles.
For most frog species — more than 6,000 of them — life starts in water. A female frog lays some eggs, a male fertilizes them, and later the eggs become tadpoles that grow up into new frogs.
McGuire says finding live tadpoles inside the frog was exciting and a little creepy.
“It was very reminiscent of the scene in Alien where the little monster explodes out of the stomach of the poor human who has been impregnated with that larval alien,” says McGuire.
This species of fanged frog lives on Sulawesi island and was first discovered by Indonesian researcher Djoko Iskandar. He and Ben Evans of McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, along with McGuire, describe the frog’s unusual form of reproduction this week in the journal PLOS ONE.
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