A rare species of Borneo jungle frog, formally known as the Lesser
Rock Frog, greet each other by waving their hind legs and spreading out
their toes like a ‘high five’. Read more about this mysterious behavior
below!
For more information on biodiversity in Borneo, please visit:
http://borneoproject.org/borneo/biodiversity-conservation
**************
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2159837/Rare-species-Borneo-jungle-frog-wave-using-hind-legs-spreading-toes-high-five.html?ito=feeds-newsxml
Rare species of Borneo jungle frog wave to each other using their hind legs and spreading out their toes in a ‘high five’
By
Graham Smith
PUBLISHED: 09:20 EST, 15 June 2012 |
UPDATED: 09:24 EST, 15 June 2012
A rare species of Borneo jungle frogs who communicate with
each other by waving have left scientists baffled. The endangered
reptiles – commonly known as the Lesser Rock Frog – greet each other by
waving their hind legs and spreading out their toes like a ‘high five’.
Zoologists had originally thought the waving was connected with breeding
habits. But now they are uncertain as the frogs start waving
long before sexual maturity. Scientists at Schonbrunn Zoo in Vienna,
Austria, bred more than a thousand Lesser Rock Frogs. They have since
discovered that that the frogs start waving almost as soon as they stop
being tadpoles.
Dagmar Schratter, the zoo’s director, said: ‘Experts believed this
had a connection with reproduction. ‘But now we know that juvenile
animals wave before sexual maturity it is puzzling. We are studying
this.’ She added: ‘We hope our visitors like them. With a bit of luck
they might get a wave or two.’
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar