Scientists find female frogs call out during sex to excite lover
April 30th, 2011 - 5:58 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Apr 30 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have discovered that the female species of the Emei music frog make unique sounds during sex to encourage the performance of their male lovers.
The findings could point to a previously unknown mode of communication in anurans (frogs and toads), opening up an avenue of study that hadn’t been explored before in female frogs.
The calls of female Emei music frogs alternate with the rhythmic motions of a male on her back. When researchers interrupted the male’s movement, the female protested, making a long burst of clicks until her guy was allowed to resume.
This is the first time courtship interaction has been observed in frogs, suggesting that “female vocalizations stimulated male’s sexual behaviour”, Jianguo Cui, an assistant professor at the Chengdu Institute of Biology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and lead author of a paper on the finding in the journal Animal Behaviour, said.
In an unusual practice for anurans, it’s the male Emei music frogs that are stationary.
They build muddy burrows and then holler out to wandering femmes, or sometimes leave the nest in an attempt to lure females back. The males’ calls sound like thin guitar strings being plucked.
After a receptive female enters the underground nest, the male mounts her in a typical mating embrace called amplexus.
This position lines up the male and female frogs’ cloacas, which are orifices at their rears from which sperm and egg flow, respectively. In some species, male frogs make noise during sex, but females remain silent.
Cui and his colleagues replicated Emei music frogs’ marshy, southwestern Chinese environment in a tank and rigged up video and audio devices to record episodes of mating.
To the researchers’ surprise, female frogs generated rapid clicks for a few seconds during intervals between a male’s humping-like movements.
Cui thinks that the males’ lusty activity mechanically stimulates the females to ovulate (release eggs).
The female’s love sounds prompt the male’s pace, somewhat akin to the cliched human female bedroom exhortations of “harder!” and “faster!”
Female calls can also rile guys up away from the bedroom burrow, the researchers saw.
Recorded female clicks incited more frequent and aggressive voicing from male frogs, who in some cases, even plundered each other’s nests to try to eliminate the competition.
Kentwood Wells, a behavioural ecologist who specializes in frogs at the University of Connecticut and who was not involved in the study, suspects that female frogs’ side of the story in anuran society has to an extent gone untold. Females’ softer voices often get drowned out by bellowing males.
“You can’t hear females in the field, because it’s a deafening racket out there. I think the whole topic of female calls is under explored,” Live Science Wells quoted him as saying.
For now, Cui and his colleagues are following up on their findings, which they published last year, by investigating the notable variances in males’ musical calls amongst different individuals. (ANI)
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Tags: animal behaviour, chengdu, chinese academy of sciences, chinese environment, cloacas, courtship, female frogs, female species, frogs, frogs and toads, guitar strings, male frogs, male lovers, orifices, rears, receptive female, rhythmic motions, sexual behaviour, underground nest, vocalizations