Helminths infect humans, livestock, and wildlife, yet remain understudied despite their significant impact on public health and agriculture. Because many of the most prevalent helminth-borne diseases are zoonotic, understanding helminth transmission among wildlife could improve predictions and management of infection risks across species. A key challenge to understanding helminth transmission dynamics in wildlife is accurately and quantitatively tracking parasite load across hosts and environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome size varies greatly across the tree of life and transposable elements are an important contributor to this variation. Among vertebrates, amphibians display the greatest variation in genome size, making them ideal models to explore the causes and consequences of genome size variation. However, high-quality genome assemblies for amphibians have, until recently, been rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTurbidity challenges the visual performance of aquatic animals. Here, we use the natural diversity of ephemeral rearing sites occupied by tadpoles of two poison frog species to explore the relationship between environments with limited visibility and individual response to perceived risk. To compare how species with diverse natural histories respond to risk after developing in a range of photic environments, we sampled wild tadpoles of (1) Dendrobates tinctorius, a rearing-site generalist with facultatively cannibalistic tadpoles and (2) Oophaga pumilio, a small-pool specialist dependent on maternal food-provisioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbstractMany animals use signals to recognize familiar individuals but risk making mistakes because the signal properties of different individuals often overlap. Furthermore, outcomes of correct and incorrect decisions yield different fitness payoffs, and animals incur these payoffs at different frequencies depending on interaction rates. To understand how signal variation, payoffs, and interaction rates shape recognition decision rules, we studied male golden rocket frogs, which recognize the calls of territory neighbors and are less aggressive to neighbors than to strangers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn juveniles extreme intraspecies aggression can seem counter-intuitive, as it might endanger their developmental goal of surviving until reproductive stage. Ultimately, aggression can be vital for survival, although the factors (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany species of Neotropical frogs have evolved to deposit their tadpoles in small water bodies inside plant structures called phytotelmata. These pools are small enough to exclude large predators but have limited nutrients and high desiccation risk. Here, we explore phytotelm use by three common Neotropical species: , an arboreal frog that periodically feeds eggs to its tadpoles; a tadpole-transporting poison frog with cannibalistic tadpoles; and a terrestrial tadpole-transporting poison frog with omnivorous tadpoles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals are often difficult to distinguish at an individual level, and being able to identify individuals can be crucial in ecological or behavioral studies. In response to this challenge, biologists have developed a range of marking (tattoos, brands, toe-clips) and tagging (banding, collars, PIT, VIA, VIE) methods to identify individuals and cohorts. Animals with complex life cycles are notoriously hard to mark because of the distortion or loss of the tag across metamorphosis.
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