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LEGLESS
FROGS MYSTERY SOLVED
Matt Walker, Earth News, June 25, 2009
Scientists think they have resolved one of the most controversial
environmental issues of the past decade: the curious case of the missing
frog legs. Around the world, frogs are found with missing or misshaped
limbs, a striking deformity that many researchers believe is caused by
chemical pollution. However, tests on frogs and toads have revealed a more
natural, benign cause. The deformed frogs are actually victims of the
predatory habits of dragonfly nymphs, which eat the legs of tadpoles.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, researchers started getting reports of
numerous wild frogs or toads being found with extra legs or arms, or with
limbs that were partly formed or missing completely. The cause of these
deformities soon became a hotly contested issue. Some researchers believed
they might be caused naturally by predators or parasites. Others thought
that was highly unlikely, fearing that chemical pollution, or UV-B radiation
caused by the thinning of the ozone layer, was triggering the deformations.
Deformed frogs became one of the most contentious environmental issues of
all time, with the parasite researchers on one side, and the 'chemical
company' as I call
them, on the other," says Sessions, an amphibian specialist and professor of
biology at Hartwick College, in Oneonta, New York. "There was a veritable
media firestorm, with millions of dollars of grant money at stake."
After a long period of research, Sessions and other researchers established
that many amphibians with extra limbs were actually infected by small
parasitic
flatworms called Riberoria trematodes. These creatures burrow into the
hindquarters of tadpoles where they physically rearrange the limb bud cells
and thereby interfere with limb development.
"But that was not end of the story," says Sessions.
"Frogs with extra limbs
may have been the most dramatic-looking deformities, but they are by far the
least common deformities found," he explains. "The most commonly found
deformities are frogs or toads found with missing or truncated limbs, and
although parasites occasionally cause limblessness in a frog, these
deformities are almost never associated with the trematode species known to
cause extra limbs."
The mystery of what causes frogs to have missing or deformed limbs remained
unsolved until Sessions teamed up with colleague Brandon Ballengee of the
University of Plymouth, UK. They report their findings in the Journal of
Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution. For a
decade, Ballengee and Sessions have collaborated on a series of art and
science projects that image amphibians' bodies to show the detail within,
the most recent of which is funded by the Arts Catalyst organization, based
in London. As part of this work, Ballengee and Richard Sunter, the official
Recorder of Reptiles and
Amphibians in Yorkshire, spent time during the summers of 2006 to 2008
surveying the occurrence of deformities in wild amphibians at three ponds in
the county. In
all, they found that between 1.2% and 9.8% of tadpoles or metamorphosed
toads at each location had hind limb deformities. Three had missing eyes.
"We were very surprised when we found so many metamorphic toads with
abnormal limbs, as it was thought to be a North American phenomenon," says
Ballengee. While surveying, Ballengee also discovered a range of natural
predators he suspected could be to blame, including stickleback fish, newts,
diving beetles, water scorpions and predatory dragonfly nymphs.
So Ballengee and Sessions decide to test how each predator preyed upon the
tadpoles, by placing them together in fish tanks in the lab. None did,
except three species of dragonfly nymph. Crucially though, the nymphs rarely
ate the tadpoles whole. More often than not, they would grab the tadpole and
chew at a hind limb, often removing it altogether. "Once they grab the
tadpole, they use their front legs to turn it around, searching for the
tender bits, in this case the hind limb buds, which they then snip off with
their mandibles," says Sessions.
Remarkably, many tadpoles survive this ordeal. "Often the tadpole is
released
and is able to swim away to live for another day," says Sessions. "If it
survives it
metamorphoses into a toad with missing or deformed hind limbs, depending on
the developmental stage of the tadpole."
If tadpoles are attacked when they are very young, they can often regenerate
their leg completely, but this ability diminishes, as they grow older. The
researchers
confirmed this by surgically removing the hind limbs of some tadpoles and
watching them grow. These tadpoles developed in an identical way to
those whose limbs had been removed by dragonflies, confirming that losing a
limb at a certain stage of a tadpole's development can lead to missing or
deformed limbs in adulthood. Adult amphibians with one hind limb appear able
to live for quite a long time, Sessions says, explaining why so many
deformed frogs and toads are discovered.
Why do the dragonflies like to eat the hind legs only? As toad tadpoles
mature, they
develop poison glands in their skin much earlier than those in their hind
legs, which could make the hind legs a far more palatable meal. The front
legs of tadpoles also
develop within the gill chamber, where they are protected.
Sessions is careful to say that he doesn't completely rule out chemicals as
the cause of some missing limbs. But 'selective predation' by dragonfly
nymphs is now by far the leading explanation, he says. "Are parasites
sufficient to cause extra limbs?"
he asks. "Yes. Is selective predation by dragonfly nymphs sufficient
to cause loss or
reduction of limbs. Yes. Are chemical pollutants necessary to
understand either of these phenomena? No."
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