How the Tree Frog Has Redefined Our View of Biology
The world’s most charismatic amphibian is upending the conventional wisdom about evolution
- By Helen Fields
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2013, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Vonesh takes his tub of tadpoles to the shed where Warkentin photographs it. A student will count the tadpoles in each picture. Insects and birds sing from the trees. Something falls—plink—on the metal roof. A freight train whistles from the train tracks that run alongside the canal; a group of howler monkeys barks a raucous response from the trees.
To scientists like Warkentin, Gamboa offers a bit of rainforest about an hour’s drive from an international airport. “Oh, my god. It is so easy,” she says. “There’s a danger of not appreciating how amazing it is. It’s an incredible place to work.”
During the day, the iconic red-eyed frogs aren’t hopping about. If you know what you’re looking for, you can find the occasional adult male clinging to a leaf like a pale green pillbox—legs folded, elbows tucked by his side to minimize water loss. A membrane patterned like a mosque’s carved wooden window screen covers each eye.
The real action is at night, so one evening Warkentin, Vonesh and some guests visit the pond to look for frogs. The birds, insects and monkeys are quiet, but amphibian chirps and creaks fill the air. One frog’s call is a clear, loud “knock-knock!” Another sounds exactly like a ray gun in a video game. The forest feels more wild at night.
Near a shed, a male red-eyed tree frog clings to the stalk of a broad leaf. Tiny orange toes outspread, he shows his white belly and wide red eyes in the light of multiple headlamps. “They have these photogenic postures,” Warkentin says. “And they just sit there and let you take a picture. They don’t run away. Some frogs are, like, so nervous.” Maybe that’s why the red-eyed tree frog has gotten famous, with its picture on so many calendars, I suggest—they’re easier to photograph than other frogs. She corrects me: “They’re cuter.”
Scientists think the ancestors of modern frogs all laid their eggs in water. Maybe the red-eyed tree frog itself could have evolved its leaf-laying habits as a result of phenotypic plasticity. Maybe an ancestor dabbled in laying its eggs out of the water, only on really wet days, to get away from aquatic predators—a plastic way of dealing with a dangerous environment—and that trait got passed on to its descendants, which eventually lost the ability to lay eggs in water at all.
Nobody knows if that’s how it happened. “That was a very long time ago and no longer amenable to those kinds of experiments,” Warkentin says.
But intriguing experiments on another kind of frog—one that might be still navigating the transition between water and land—are underway. Justin Touchon, a former PhD student of Warkentin’s, studies how the hourglass tree frog, Dendropsophus ebraccatus, lays its eggs, which are less packed with jelly and more prone to drying out than red-eyed tree frogs’. A female hourglass tree frog seems to choose where to lay eggs based on dampness. At ponds shaded by trees, Touchon found, they’ll lay eggs on leaves above the water, but at hotter, more exposed ponds, the eggs go in the water.
In a study published last month, he found that eggs were more likely to survive on land if there was a lot of rain, and more likely to survive in water if rainfall was scarce. He also looked at rain records for Gamboa in the past 39 years and found that while overall rainfall hasn’t changed, the pattern has: Storms are larger but more sporadic. That change in the environment could be driving a change in how the hourglass tree frogs reproduce. “It gives a window on what caused the movement to reproducing on land to occur,” Touchon says—a climate that shifted to have lots of steady rain could have made it safer for frogs to lay eggs out of the water.
Warkentin’s group is based on the ground floor of the Gamboa Elementary School, which closed in the 1980s. One morning, Warkentin sits on an ancient swivel chair with dusty arms at a retired office desk, doing what looks like a grade-school craft project.
On the floor at her left sits a white bucket with rows of green rectangles duct-taped to the inside. She reaches down and pulls one out. It’s a piece of leaf, cut with scissors from one of the broad-leafed plants by the experimental pond, and on it is a clutch of gelatinous red-eyed tree frog eggs. She tears off a strip of tape and sticks the piece of leaf onto a blue plastic rectangle, cut from a plastic picnic plate.
“You can do an amazing amount of science with disposable dishware, duct tape and galvanized wire,” she says.
She stands the card in a clear plastic cup with a bit of water in the bottom, where the tadpoles will fall when they hatch, and goes on to the next piece of leaf. The tadpoles will be part of new predation experiments.
There’s great explanatory value in simple models—but she wants to understand how nature actually operates. “We’re trying to grapple with what’s real,” she says. “And reality is more complicated.”
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Comments (7)
I love your magazine and look forward to each new issue. But,…..time after time have I question your photo editing department. I am referring to the article about “The Frog That Roared”. I love the first picture, up close and personal. The pictures on the next page are equally impressive, it shows the snake, the eggs, the eggs during their gestation process, eggs hatching early and then the final pic is of a tab pole. Great pictures. BUT……….it goes south from there. Why do you need three pictures of Karen Warkentin? Yes she is a good looking women, but where are the pictures that actually show the experimental frog ponds? How about pictures of the jungle or the students in their full pond gear? Why three pictures of Karen Warkentin, isn’t that a bit excessive? YES, IT IS. And then, the final picture is of the frog AGAIN! Not only is a another redundant picture of the frog, but it’s a two page picture. You could have shrunk it down and put another picture up, such as………..the row of white buckets with the green duct tape. This is not the first time I have seen this happen, your lack of proper picture editing leaves a lot to the imagination. Your magazine wants to show us the world………..then do it! Stop the repeat pictures. It makes no sense when I know there are hundreds of pictures taken when you go into the field for a story line. Peggy K. Vacaville, ca
Posted by Peggyk13 on January 22,2013 | 12:04 PM
Frogs represent the 'middle kingdom' as are bees---symbology from the Balinese..have a very lovely character in their 'mythology' which is based on their cosmology. Frogs are their messengers between realms. The Bible and Christians took this and 'demonized' the Balinese as anti- Christian. I recently straightened one of their Fundamentalist channels, who is quite open. It is said that when the frogs start to dissappear the earth is threatened...and blessings are upon us that our Ecological Sciences are now trying to change things.
Posted by Michelle Heart on January 9,2013 | 02:53 PM
How the red-eyed tree frog redefined our view of biology, is how they reproduce. They do not go to streams or lakes to lay their eggs, but go to bromeliads. The rain water stored in-between their leaves, is the nursery for their eggs, and the tadpoles who are born with gills. When they grow into frogs, they have lungs. They are an amphibian dependent on this air plant in the tropical forest.
Posted by Tim Upham on January 3,2013 | 11:16 PM
The other major "faux pas" in this article is committed near the bottom of the middle column on page 58. The author states: "By chance, the sequence of a gene changes, a new trait emerges,the organism passes on its altered DNA to the next generation and gives rise eventually to a different species. Accordingly, tens of millions of years ago, some land mammal acquired mutations that let it adapt to life in the ocean - and its descendants are the whales that we know and love." So.... If I'm reading this as I think the author apparently misunderstands evolution to say...... Along comes some hapless land mammal that almost magically happens to "acquire" by random chance a set of proper mutations which then "cause" it to be able to make the move to water. As if one might envision the animal saying to itself, "Whoa! What am I doing with these clumsy, flipper-like legs?.... and why do my rear legs seem to be so shrunken? .... and what's with this broad flat tail? and why am I getting so enormous? I guess I'll just roll over into that ocean over there and see what happens. Hey look! All these mutations really work great out here in the ocean. I'm sure glad I was lucky enough to find out what these adaptive features were good for, instead of lying there on land to die like a beached whale! Helen Fields puts the cart before the horse, evolutionarily. As some Montana folks say.... "That dog won't hunt." This professor gives the article a "B+" for creativity, but a "D-" for scientific accuracy. The last thing that the Smithsonian magazine should do is to mislead the public regarding proper "science" concepts. It needs to help foster scientific literacy, not add to the scientific illiteracy of the public.
Posted by Jack Kirkley on December 29,2012 | 03:27 AM
Environmentally influenced traits (i.e., phenotypic plasticity) is not a novel or revolutionary discovery.... its a standard phenomenon in the toolbox of evolutionary biologists. As an anti-predator strategy.... How is the premature hatching of tree frogs.... dropping early from their egg mass, when given sufficient tactile stimulation..... different from the premature fledging of raptor nestlings from their nests when an approaching predator (e.g., black bear) or a human climber is nearing their nest? The tadpoles may be considerably less mobile than their fully matured counterparts, just as the raptor nestlings are still flightless for days or weeks after prematurely fledging. But, apparently, this early departure, on average, holds better chance for success than staying around and being immediately consumed by the predator. Hence, its selective advantage caused it to become an adaptation. There's nothing revolutionary or earth shaking about this at all. The article is more directed toward hype than substance, unfortunately.
Posted by Jack Kirkley on December 28,2012 | 02:55 AM
What tripe! That genes encode mechanisms for adaptive (flexible) response systems is not news and adaptive behaviors ARE phenotypic and exhibited by most if not all species.
Posted by Hominid on December 23,2012 | 08:19 AM
This is a ridiculous article. There is no amazing breakthrough or fundamental change in understanding here. Credible biologists do not think of genes as a “blueprint”. In 1976, Richard Dawkins made an actual breakthrough, which was to state that the gene is the unit of selection, riding inside the body of an organism, rather than a code to make the organism. This fundamental change in our understanding has been adopted by the vast majority of biologists, and is the most important discovery since the discovery of genes themselves.
Posted by Danny Muller on December 20,2012 | 05:20 PM