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Frog communicates by ultrasound

This helps the concave-eared Amolops tormotus to overcome the noise of the waterfalls it inhabits, say researchers.

Updated on: Mar 16, 2006 06:20 PM IST
None | By , Paris
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A rare frog uses ultrasonic sound to communicate with its brethren, a clever tool that helps it overcome the noise of the waterfalls it inhabits, researchers in the US and China have found.

HT Image
HT Image

The concave-eared torrent frog (Amolops tormotus) joins bats, dolphins and whales and a small number of rodents in the elite club of creatures that are able to communicate by ultrasound.

A team led by Albert Feng of the University of Illinois found that male frogs of this species make high-pitched melodic bird-like calls that sometimes exceeded their recorder's maximum range of 128 kilohertz - more than six times the limit of human hearing.

The frogs inhabit Huangshan Hot Springs, a popular mountainous area west of Shanghai, where there are loud waterfalls and streams.

The high frequencies provide a channel of communication that cannot be disrupted by the lower-frequency rumble of the water, said Feng.

"Nature has a way of evolving mechanisms to facilitate communication in very adverse situations," he said.

The discovery also answers a puzzle as to why the frogs do not have external eardrums.

The paper appears today in Nature, the weekly British science journal.

 
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