Why Do Frogs Make so Much Racket?
It might be interesting to note that only male frogs call. This is because the female has to be especially choosy. A female can lay eggs only once, maybe twice, a year whereas a male can mate several times. So, the male contribution to produce offspring is much less costly than the female contribution. Therefore, if a male chooses a suboptimal mate his loss is not as great as if a female were to choose carelessly. This pattern also holds true in bird species, where drab females select males based on the brilliance of their feathers.
Calls are created when air fills pouches on the throat, called the vocal sac. The air vibrates within the vocal sac and sound is created. The quality of the sound produced can vary with environmental variables such as temperature. The sounds created can be quite loud and can carry for miles, attracting females from neighboring ponds. In fact, the call of the spring peeper has been said to have the same decibel level as an airport runway! Oftentimes frogs of the same species will congregate within a single pond and form what is known as a chorus. The noise of a chorus can travel farther than the sound from a single individual. So, more females may be attracted to larger choruses.
Why Do Frogs Make so Much Racket?
The smaller male bullfrog climbs on the back of the female that has chosen him based on his call.
Credit: Doug Hardesty
Copyright: Doug Hardesty
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Takeaways
- Male frogs call for females
- Female frogs choose males based on call quality
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