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Temperature affects the quality of male frogs' mating calls: Females can hear the difference
A study from the University of California, Davis, found that temperature affects the sound and quality of male frogs' mating ...
May 5—April is such an amazing month of change and we have seen it again this year. Early, we had temperatures of less than 10 degrees and a week later, we climbed to 70 degrees. In this warmth, ...
A good love song tells female frogs when the time is right for mating, finds a UC Davis study showing male frogs change their ...
Study Finds on MSN
The surprising way frog love songs might track climate change
In A Nutshell: Male frog calls change with water temperature: Warmer water produces faster, shorter calls while cold water ...
Green Matters on MSN
Climate change is making frogs more attractive. Scientists say it could also affect their future
Researchers noted that as water became hotter in ponds, mating calls of male frogs became quicker and more desperate.
After a long and frigid winter, the sound of spring peepers singing from beaver bogs is a welcome one for New Englanders. But before frogs can start their songs, a massive migration has to take place.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about biodiversity and the hidden quirks of the natural world. It looks dead for months, its body packed with ice. But ...
Spring peepers are tiny brown frogs that are currently creating a loud chorus in south-central Indiana wetlands. Beanblossom Bottoms Nature Preserve is a prime location to listen to the frog chorus ...
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