Relying on known or exploring for new? Movement patterns and reproductive resource use in a tadpole-transporting frog

Author:

Beck Kristina B.12,Loretto Matthias-Claudio2,Ringler Max34,Hödl Walter4,Pašukonis Andrius25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Behavioural Ecology and Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen, Germany

2. Department of Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, United States of America

4. Department of Integrative Zoology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

5. FAS Center for Systems Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States of America

Abstract

Animals relying on uncertain, ephemeral and patchy resources have to regularly update their information about profitable sites. For many tropical amphibians, widespread, scattered breeding pools constitute such fluctuating resources. Among tropical amphibians, poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) exhibit some of the most complex spatial and parental behaviors—including territoriality and tadpole transport from terrestrial clutches to ephemeral aquatic deposition sites. Recent studies have revealed that poison frogs rely on spatial memory to successfully navigate through their environment. This raises the question of when and how these frogs gain information about the area and suitable reproductive resources. To investigate the spatial patterns of pool use and to reveal potential explorative behavior, we used telemetry to follow males of the territorial dendrobatid frog Allobates femoralis during tadpole transport and subsequent homing. To elicit exploration, we reduced resource availability experimentally by simulating desiccated deposition sites. We found that tadpole transport is strongly directed towards known deposition sites and that frogs take similar direct paths when returning to their home territory. Frogs move faster during tadpole transport than when homing after the deposition, which probably reflects different risks and costs during these two movement phases. We found no evidence for exploration, neither during transport nor homing, and independent of the availability of deposition sites. We suggest that prospecting during tadpole transport is too risky for the transported offspring as well as for the transporting male. Relying on spatial memory of multiple previously discovered pools appears to be the predominant and successful strategy for the exploitation of reproductive resources in A. femoralis. Our study provides for the first time a detailed description of poison frog movement patterns during tadpole transport and corroborates recent findings on the significance of spatial memory in poison frogs. When these frogs explore and discover new reproductive resources remains unknown.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Erwin Schrödinger fellowships

University of Vienna (KWA grant and Förderungsstipendium)

Ethologische Gesellschaft e.V. (master’s thesis grant)

Investissement d’Avenir, Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference81 articles.

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2. Calls, colours, shape, and genes: a multi-trait approach to the study of geographic variation in the Amazonian frog Allobates femoralis;Amézquita;Biological Journal of the Linnean Society,2009

3. MuMIn: multi-model inference;Bartoń,2013

4. lme4: linear mixed-effects models using S4 classes;Bates,2010

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