SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.44 número3Malvaceae neotropicae novae vel minus cognitae XI. A new Quararibea from Panamá and notes on related speciesAmphisbaena mertensii (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae): Notes on natural history, distribution, and morphology índice de autoresíndice de assuntospesquisa de artigos
Home Pagelista alfabética de periódicos  

Serviços Personalizados

Journal

Artigo

Indicadores

Links relacionados

  • Em processo de indexaçãoCitado por Google
  • Não possue artigos similaresSimilares em SciELO
  • Em processo de indexaçãoSimilares em Google

Compartilhar


Caldasia

versão impressa ISSN 0366-5232versão On-line ISSN 2357-3759

Caldasia vol.44 no.3 Bogotá set./dez. 2022  Epub 06-Jun-2024

https://doi.org/10.15446/caldasia.v44n3.89189 

SHORT NOTE

Defensive Behavior in Rhinella bergi and Rhinella mirandaribeiroi (Anura: Bufonidae)

Comportamiento defensivo en Rhinella bergi y Rhinella mirandaribeiroi (Anura: Bufonidae)

Ibrahim Kamel Rodrigues Nehemy1 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5203-4128

Sarah Mângia1 
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0038-123X

Priscila Santos Carvalho2 
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7344-2342

Diego José Santana1 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8789-3061

1Universidade Federal do Mato Grosso do Sul, Instituto de Biociências, Campo Grande, 79070-900, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, ibrahimnehemy@hotmail.com*, sarahmangia@yahoo.com.br, jose.santana@ufms.br

2Universidade Estadual Paulista, Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas, São José do Rio Preto, 15054-000, São Paulo, Brazil, pricarvalho.bio@gmail.com


ABSTRACT

Here we report two cases of defensive behavior known as "stiff-legged", unprecedented for the species Rhinella bergi and R. mirandaribeiroi. We registered the behavior at localities in Mato Grosso do Sul and Minas Gerais states, Brazil. With our records, there are now five species from open areas that exhibit this behavior. We assume that the species that inhabit these areas exhibit this avoiding predation behavior simulating a dead body on the ground, behavior known as "death feigning", unlike forest species, which use this strategy to camouflage themselves between the leaves.

Keywords: Amphibians; defensive strategy; stiff-legged posture

RESUMEN

Reportamos aquí dos casos de comportamiento defensivo conocido como "stiff-legged", sin precedentes para las especies Rhinella bergi y R. mirandaribeiroi. Los registros se realizaron en localidades de los estados de Mato Grosso do Sul y Minas Gerais, Brasil. Con nuestros registros, ahora hay cinco especies de áreas abiertas que exhiben este comportamiento. Asumimos que las especies que habitan estas áreas despliegan este comportamiento que evita la depredación simulando un cadáver en el suelo, comportamiento conocido como "fingir la muerte", a diferencia de las especies forestales, que utilizan esta estrategia para camuflarse entre las hojas.

Palabras clave: Anfibios; estrategia defensiva; postura "stiff-legged"

Anurans exhibit several defensive behaviors, including sound emission (e.g. release calls and agonistic calls) and visual displays, such as thanatosis and stiff-legged (Duellman and Trueb 1986, Toledo et al. 2011). The last one is characterized by a posture with the legs stiff and back extended, remaining the individual static in this position for a few minutes after the disturbance caused by a potential predator (Sazima 1978, Schlüter and Salas 1991, Bertoluci et al. 2007).

This behavior is mainly known for groups that inhabit forests: species of the genera Proceratophrys, Macrogenioglottus, Odontophrynus (Odontophrynidae), Scythrophrys (Leptodactylidae), Arcovomer, and Ctenophryne (Microhyliade) (Toledo and Zina 2004, Menin and Rodrigues 2007, Giaretta and Martins 2009, Maffei and Ubaid 2016, Mira-Mendes et al. 2016, Rolim 2017, Borteiro et al. 2018). However, the stiff-legged behavior was also recorded for species that are typical of non-forested environments, such as the toads Rhinella granulosa (Spix, 1824) and R. pygmaea (Myers and Carvalho, 1952) (Mângia and Santana 2013, Figueiredo-de-Andrade and Silveira 2018), both from the R. granulosa species group (Narvaes and Rodrigues 2009). In this note, we report two cases of stiff-legged behavior in additional species of the R. granulosa species group.

On 23 November 2017, we observed a male individual of Rhinella bergi (Céspedez, 2000) in a Chacoan area, in the Porto Murtinho municipality (21°41 South, 57°44 West), Mato Grosso do Sul state, Brazil. When we handled the specimen, at approximately 21:00h, it exhibited the stiff-legged defensive behavior (Fig. 1a). Right after we placed the individual on the floor, it continued exhibiting the behavior, keeping the hind limbs stretched and back extended, with the body flattened dorso-ventrally. The second record was registered on 19 December 2018, in the São Gonçalo do Pará municipality (19°59 South, 44°51West), Minas Gerais state, Brazil. We collected a male individual of R. mirandaribeiroi (Gallardo, 1965), which exhibited the same stiff-legged behavior, while being handled (Fig. 1b). We collected both specimens and housed at the Zoological Collection of the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul (ZUFMS-AMP13336; ZUFMS-AMP13283; collection permits: SISBio 45889-1).

Figure 1 Specimens of Rhinella displaying stiff-legged behavior. a Adult male of Rhinella bergi (MAP4018), captured in Porto Murtinho municipality, Mato Grosso do Sul state, Brazil. b Adult male of Rhinella mirandaribeiroi (MAP5768), captured in São Gonçalo do Pará municipality, Minas Gerais state, Brazil. 

The defensive stiff-legged behavior is usually combined with the anuran cryptic coloration resembling dead leaves (Toledo et al. 2011). Nevertheless, both species recorded in the present study have terrestrial habits and inhabit open areas (Narvaes and Rodrigues 2009). Rhinella bergi occurs in Chaco regions of Paraguay, northwestern Argentina and Mato Grosso do Sul in Brazil (Céspedez 2000), while R. mirandaribeiroi occurs in Cerrado areas of Brazil, in the Noel Kempff National Park, Bolivia, and in Cerrado enclaves within the Amazon Forest (Narvaes and Rodrigues 2009, Melo et al. 2013).

Table 1 Records of stiff-legged behavior for Brazilian anuran species from forest environments and open areas. 

Taxon Habitat References
Bufonidae
Dendrophryniscus berthalutzae Izecksohn, 1994 Forest-floor Toledo et al. 2011
Dendrophryniscus brevipollicatus Jiménez de la Espada, 1870 Forest-floor Bertoluci et al. 2007
Dendrophryniscus carvalhoi Izecksohn, 1994 Forest-floor Cassimiro et al. 2010
Dendrophryniscus leucomystax Izecksohn, 1968 Forest-floor Bertoluci et al. 2007
Rhinella bergi (Céspedez, 2000) Open areas Present study
Rhinella granulosa (Spix, 1824) Forest-floor Mângia and Santana 2013
Rhinella marina (Linnaeus, 1758) Open areas Ferrante et al. 2020
Rhinella mirandaribeiroi (Gallardo, 1965) Open areas Present study
Rhinella pygmaea (Myers and Carvalho, 1952) Open areas Figueiredo-de-Andrade and Silveira 2018
Craugastoridae
Euparkerella cochranae Izecksohn, 1988 Forest-floor Toledo et al. 2011
Cycloramphidae
Cycloramphus parvulus (Girard, 1853) Forest-floor Rocha et al. 1998
Leptodactylidae
Paratelmatobius poecilogaster Giaretta and Castanho, 1990 Forest-floor Toledo et al. 2011
Physalaemus gracilis (Boulenger, 1883) Forest-floor Rocha and Martins 2013
Pleurodema bibroni Tschudi, 1838 Forest-floor Kolenc et al. 2009
Scythrophrys sawayae (Cochran, 1953) Forest-floor Garcia 1999
Microhylidae
Arcovomer passarellii Carvalho, 1954 Forest-floor Giaretta and Martins 2009
Chiasmocleis ventrimaculata (Andersson, 1945) Forest-floor Schlüter and Salas 1991
Ctenophryne geayi Mocquard, 1904 Forest-floor Schlüter and Salas 1991, Menin and Rodrigues 2007
Microhyla berdmorei (Blyth, 1856) Forest-floor Shahrudin 2014
Stereocyclops incrassatus Cope, 1870 Forest-floor Tonini et al. 2011
Stereocyclops parkeri (Wettstein, 1934) Forest floor Sazima 1978
Odontophrynidae
Macrogenioglottus alipioi Carvalho, 1946 Forest floor Mira-Mendes et al. 2016
Odontophrynus americanus (Duméril and Bibron, 1841) Open areas Maffei and Ubaid 2016, Rolim 2017, Borteiro et al. 2018
Proceratophrys appendiculata (Günther, 1873) Forest floor Sazima 1978
Proceratophrys boiei (Wied-Neuwied, 1824) Forest-floor Toledo and Zina 2004, Costa et al. 2009
Proceratophrys mantiqueira Mângia, Santana, Cruz and Feio, 2014 Forest-floor Moura et al. 2010 (cited as P. melanopogon)
Proceratophrys melanopogon (Miranda-Ribeiro, 1926) Forest-floor Toledo et al. 2011
Proceratophrys moehringi Weygoldt and Peixoto, 1985 Forest-floor Weygoldt 1986
Proceratophrys renalis (Miranda-Ribeiro, 1920) Forest-floor de Amorim Peixoto-M et al. 2013, Peixoto et al. 2013

Our records add up to five species of open areas exhibiting this defensive strategy (Maffei and Ubaid 2016, Rolim 2017, Borteiro et al. 2018, Figueiredo-de-Andrade and Silveira 2018, Ferrante et al. 2020) (Table 1). Mira-Mendes et al. (2016)) demonstrated the occurrence of this behavior for 23 forest-floor species. Although Pleurodema bibroni Tschudi, 1838 is categorized as a species from the forest-floor in the Mira-Mendes et al. (2016) study, Kolenc et al. (2009) showed that this species also inhabits non-forested environments, suggesting that P. bibroni exhibit the stiff-legged behavior as death feigning function, rather than camouflage.

In total, 29 anuran species from six families show the stiff-legged behavior, with the family Bufonidae having the largest number of species that exhibit this defensive strategy (n=9), from which four species are from open areas (Table 1). Forest species that exhibit the stiff-legged behavior use this strategy to camouflage themselves among the leaves, once they present cryptic coloration, thus avoiding predation (Sazima 1978). With this, we can assume that the species of open areas perform stiff-legged behavior to look like dead body on the ground (death feigning).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to the reviewers of the manuscript, who made detailed observations that contributed to the improvement of the grade. IKRN thanks Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPQ) for his scholarship (CNPq 133940/2020-9). DJS thanks Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico for his research fellowship (CNPq 309420/2020-2). PSC thanks Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES Finance Code 001)

LITERATURE CITED

Amorim Peixoto MA, Mângia S, Rodrigues R, Santana DJ. 2013. Defensive behavior in Proceratophrys renalis (Miranda-Ribeiro, 1920) (Anura, Odontophrynidae). Herpetol. Notes 6:479-430. [ Links ]

Bertoluci J, Brassaloti RA, Sawakuchi HO, Ribeiro JW, Woehl-G JR. 2007. Defensive behavior with stiff-legged posture in the Brazilian tree toads Dendrophryniscus brevipollicatus and D. leucomystax (Anura, Bufonidae). Alytes 25(1-2): 38-44. [ Links ]

Borteiro C, Rosset SD, Kolenc F, Barrasso DA, Lescano JN, Baldo D. 2018. Stereotyped defensive behaviours in frogs of the genus Odontophrynus (Amphibia: Anura: Odontophrynidae). Curr. Herpetol. 37(2):172-179. doi: https://doi.org/10.5358/ hsj.37.172Links ]

Cassimiro J, Verdade VK, Rodrigues MT. 2010. Dendrophryniscus carvalhoi (Carvalho's Tree Toad). Defensive behavior. Herpetol. Rev. 41:472. [ Links ]

Céspedez JA. 2000 "1999". Una nueva espécie de Bufo del grupo granulosus (Anura: Bufonidae) do Nordeste Argentino. FACENA 15:72-91. [ Links ]

Costa-P N, Silva-Soares-T, Bernstein-L B. 2009. Defensive behaviour of Proceratophrys boiei (Wied-Neuwied, 1824) (Amphibia, Anura, Cycloramphidae). Herpetol. Notes 2:227-229. [ Links ]

Duellman-W E, Trueb-L. 1986. Biology of Amphibians. New York (NY): McGraw-Hill Book Company. [ Links ]

Ferrante L, Najar T, Kaeffer IL. 2020. Four new anuran defence behaviours observed in the cane toad Rhinella marina. Ethol. Ecol. Evol. 32(6):590-595. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/0394 9370.2020.1769737Links ]

Figueiredo-de-Andrade CA, Silveira LS. 2018. The defensive behavior of Rhinella pygmaea (Myers and Carvalho, 1952) Herpetol. Notes 11:205-207. doi: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7663-6852Links ]

Garcia, PCA. 1999. Scythrophrys sawayae. (NCN). Defensive behavior. Herpetol. Rev. 30(4):224. [ Links ]

Giaretta AA, Martins L. 2009. Notes on the call and behavior of Arco-vomer passarellii (Anura: Microhylidae). Herpetol. Notes 2: 91-93. [ Links ]

Kolenc F, Borteiro C, Baldo-D, Ferraro-D P, Prigioni-C. 2009. The tadpoles and advertisement calls of Pleurodema bibroni Tschudi and Pleurodema kriegi (Müller), with notes on their geographic distribution and conservation status (Amphibia, Anura, Leiuperidae). Zootaxa 1969:1-35. [ Links ]

Maffei-F, Ubaid FK. 2016. Defensive behavior of Odontophrynus americanus (Duméril & Bibron, 1841). Neotropical Biol. Conserv. 11(3):1951-97. doi: https://doi.org/10.4013/nbc.2016.113.10Links ]

Mângia-S, Santana-D J. 2013. Defensive behavior in Rhinella granulosa (Spix, 1824) (Amphibia: Anura: Bufonidae). Herpetol. Notes 6:45-46. [ Links ]

Melo M, Fava F, Pinto HBA, Bastos RP, Nomura F. 2013. Diversidade de Anuros (Amphibia) na reserva extrativista lago do Cedro e seu entorno, Aruanã, Goiás. Biota Neotrop. 13(2):205-217. doi: https://doi.org/10.1590/S1676-06032013000200020Links ]

Menin M, Rodrigues DJ. 2007. Ctenophryne geayi (Brow Egg Frog). Behavior. Herpetol. Rev. 38:182. [ Links ]

Mira-Mendes CV, Ruas DS, Castro I, Sole M, Baumgarten JE. 2016. Defensive behaviour in the Bahia forest frog Macrogenioglottus alipioi Carvalho, 1946 (Anura: Odontophrynidae), with a review of the stiff-legged posture. Herpetol. Notes 9:91-94. [ Links ]

Moura MR, Santana DJ, Mângia S, Feio RN. 2010. Proceratophrys melanopogon (Black-bearded Horned Leaf Toad). Defensive Behaviour. Herpetol. Rev. 41:479. [ Links ]

Narvaes P, Rodrigues MT. 2009. Taxonomic revision of Rhinella granulosa species group (Amphibia, Anura, Bufonidae), with a description of a new species. Arq. Zool. 40(1):1-73. doi: https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2176-7793.v40i1p1-73Links ]

Peixoto MAA, Mângia S, Rodrigues R, Santana DJ. 2013. Defensive behavior in Proceratophrys renalis (Miranda-Ribeiro, 1920) (Anura, Odontophrynidae). Herpetol. Notes 6:479-430. [ Links ]

Rocha CFD, Sluys MV, Bergallo HG, Alves MAS, Vrcibradic D. 1998. Zachaenus parvulus (Leaf frog): defensive behavior and color pattern. Herpetol. Rev. 29:232-234. [ Links ]

Rocha SB, Martins FI. 2013. Physalaemus gracilis (Graceful Dwarf Frog). Defensive Behaviour. Herpetol. Rev. 44:299. [ Links ]

Rolim DC. 2017. Defensive behaviour in Odontophrynus americanus (Duméril & Bibron, 1841) (Amphibia, Anura, Odontophrynidae). Herpetol. Notes 10:67-69. [ Links ]

Sazima I. 1978. Convergent defensive behavior of two leaf-litter frogs of southeastern Brazil. Biotropica 10(2):158. doi: https://doi.org/10.2307/2388020Links ]

Schlüter AS, Salas AWL. 1991. Reproduction, tadpoles, and ecological aspects of three syntopic microhylid species from Peru (Amphibia: Mycrohylidae). Stuttg. Beitr. Naturkd. (A):1-17. [ Links ]

Shahrudin S. 2014. Defensive Behaviour of Microhyla berdmorei (Blyth, 1856) (Anura: Microhylidae) from Peninsular Malaysia. Herpetol. Notes 7:787-789. [ Links ]

Toledo LF, Sazima I, Haddad CFB. 2011. Behavioural defences of anurans: an overview. Ethol. Ecol. Evol. 23(1):1-25. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/03949370.2010.534321Links ]

Toledo LF, Zina JP. 2004. Proceratophrys boiei (Smooth Horned Toad). Defensive behavior. Herpetol. Rev. 35(4):375. [ Links ]

Tonini JFR, Mendonça IS, Coutinho AB, Gasparini JL. 2011. Anurans from Costa Bela, state of Espírito Santo, southeastern Brazil: inventory at an urban area and the rediscovery of Allobates in the state. Herpetol. Notes 4:435-444. [ Links ]

Weygoldt P. 1986. Beobachtungen zur Ökologie und Biologie von Fröschen an einem neotropischen Bergbach. Zool. Jahrb. Abt. Syst. Geog. Biol. Tiere 113:429-454. [ Links ]

Citation: Nehemy IKR, Mângia S, Carvalho PS, Santana DJ. 2022. Defensive Behavior in Rhinella bergi and Rhinella mirandaribeiroi (Anura: Bufonidae). Caldasia 44(3):648-652. doi: https://doi.org/10.15446/caldasia.v44n3.89189

AUTHOR'S CONTRIBUTION IKRN and PSC design and writing; SM and DJS obtaining data, descriptions and photographs. All authors rewiewed drafts of the paper and approved the final draft.

Received: August 09, 2020; Accepted: September 06, 2021; Published: September 08, 2021

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

Creative Commons License This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License