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Saturday, November 08, 2008 - 5:18 PM
Louis J. Sheehan When some toad toes tap, maybe it’s the beat, not the motion, that matters. The
resulting vibrations could agitate insects and other little morsels,
setting them wriggling and scuttling in a flurry of activity that
triggers a toad’s known tendency to strike at moving prey, says
entomologist John Sloggett of Groningen, the Netherlands. http://louis8j8sheehan8esquire.wordpress.com/
Details
of how a toad’s brain processes information about when and where to
strike will require deep amphibian neuroscience. But Sloggett and
Groningen ecologist Ilja Zeilstra propose that vibration deserves
attention in the study of what’s up with all the toe wiggling among
frogs and toads.  PEDAL LURINGVIDEO
| An adult cane toad waggles its hind toes when littler toads show up,
an intriguing motion that draws bite-sized juveniles close enough to
become a cannibal's lunch. Video shown in real time, then slowed down.M. Hagman That study of toe motion surged in 2008, with two papers: a study in January’s Animal Behaviour on cane toads’ habit of “pedal luring,” and a paper by Sloggett and Zeilstra in the online version of the November Animal Behaviour. Cane
toads flutter their toes when small prey appear, and the intriguing
pedal lure draws little cane toads closer to bigger cannibalistic ones,
reported Mattias Hagman, now at Stockholm University in Sweden, and
Rick Shine of the University of Sydney in Australia, in January. Hagman
and Shine studied a colony of captive cane toads for research on how to
minimize damage to Australia’s native landscape as these big, poisonous
toads invade. Hagman noticed that the arrival of crickets or a nearby
aquarium full of bite-sized juveniles set the long middle toes of the
adults’ hind feet waving.  TAP DANCEVIDEO
| A Mozambique rain frog waggles its feet when offered a mealworm, and
the sound recording (from both toes) indicates that the motion taps out
strong vibrations, which could play a role in nabbing prey.Sloggett & Zeilstra. 2008 Animal Behaviour To
test the effects of toe waving, Hagman and Shine built a mechanical toe
that could wiggle at various rates and affixed it to a taxidermy mount
of a deceased toad. Waving the toe didn’t much interest the crickets.
But the motion did entice clusters of the juvenile toads to move closer
to the stuffed mount, Hagman and Shine reported. Older cane toads
near water could easily encounter youngsters clustering there during
the dry season, Shine says. Dissecting more than two dozen adults from
the wild, Hagman and Shine found that 64 percent of the adults’ meals
had been even smaller toads of their own species. “By understanding these interactions, we might be able to work out ways to turn cannibalism to our advantage,” Shine says. Waving
toes to create an alluring motion makes sense with visually responsive
prey, says Sloggett. But for frogs and toads eating mainly
invertebrates, which don’t respond much to gestures, maybe it’s the
vibrations and subsequent frenzy of motion that matter, he and
ecologist Zeilstra suggest in their new paper. The two
researchers keep frogs and toads as a matter of personal interest, and
Sloggett even brought North American amphibians with him to Europe
after he recently finished a project at the University of Kentucky in
Lexington. Observation of some of those companions brings the total
number documented to at least 13 species across seven frog and toad
families, the team reports. http://louis8j8sheehan8esquire.wordpress.com/
Getting information about an animal’s
diet in the wild isn’t perfect, but several species are known to eat a
lot of invertebrates. One such toe-wiggler, the Mozambique rain frog, Breviceps mossambicus,
probably doesn’t prey on vertebrates because it has such a small mouth.
This frog flexes its long middle toe when it catches sight of food, and
by feeding a rain frog on a sheet of plastic, the researchers recorded
strong vibrations from the toe tapping. Toe flexing for useful
vibrations “sounds plausible to me,” Shine says. “But the data are yet
to be gathered.” And vibrations and motion can work together, Hagman
says. Louis J. Sheehan
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