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Boston University Researchers Find Neotropical Treefrog That Can Choose to Lay Eggs in Water or on Land


May 21, 2008

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When frogs reproduce, like all vertebrates, they either lay their eggs in water or on land--with one exception, according to new research by a team of Boston University scientists who discovered a treefrog (Dendropsophus ebraccatus) in Panama that reproduces both ways. The neotropical frog makes a behavioral decision to lay egg masses aquatically in a pond or terrestrially on the overhanging plants above a pond, where the newly-hatched tadpoles simply fall into the water. Full Story

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Boston University

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