Female frogs have ways to avoid the attention of males Carolin Dittrich
Male frogs commonly coerce female frogs into mating, but some females have come up with ways to avoid harassment 鈥 including playing dead.
Many frog species, including the (Rana temporaria), only have a short window of a few weeks each year to mate. This means that lots of males simultaneously compete for the attention of females, sometimes leading to deadly clashes as individuals are submerged under a competing group of males.
鈥淚t could be that there are several males clinging to one female, which often leads to the death of the female,鈥 says at the Natural History Museum in Berlin, Germany.
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Now, Dittrich and her colleagues have found that female common frogs employ a few different tactics to evade males.
The team collected common frogs during the breeding season 鈥 96 females and 48 males 聽鈥 and placed one male and two differently sized females in a box filled with 5 centimetres of water. The frogs were then allowed to move freely for 1 hour while the team recorded their behaviour.
Of the 54 female frogs that were embraced by a male as part of the mating process, 83 per cent rotated away, making it the most common escape tactic.
Many used more than one technique. Another popular avoidance measure was to make what is known as a release call, which was observed in 48 per cent of females.
鈥淢ales typically use release calls to signal other males that they are a male, so to let them go,鈥 says Dittrich, and the females seem to mimic this call to convince males to let free them too.
The way male European common frogs pile onto females sometimes results in death by drowning Carolin Dittrich
Thirty-three per cent of clasped females exhibited 鈥渢onic immobility鈥, otherwise known as playing dead.
In 46 per cent of the cases, the females evaded the male鈥檚 attention, with higher rates of success for smaller females, which are more easily able to escape from a male鈥檚 grip.
Although this study was done in a lab, Dittrich thinks female frogs would exhibit similar behaviour in the wild.
鈥淯sually, it is seen that females are helpless,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut this study shows that they are not as passive as previously thought.鈥
Journal reference
Royal Society Open Science
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