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27 June 2024 Long-Term Heat Tolerance and Accelerated Metamorphosis: Hot Spring Adaptations of Buergeria japonica
Bagus Priambodo, Kento Shiraga, Ippei Harada, Hajime Ogino, Takeshi Igawa
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Abstract

Extreme temperatures are a major threat to the survival of ectotherms such as amphibians. The tree frogs belonging to the genus Buergeria have accomplished a latitudinal distribution and a wide range of thermal adaptations. In particular, Buergeria japonica, referred to as the “hot spring frog”, has been reported to tolerate extremely high temperatures. However, it is unclear how the heat tolerance and metamorphic strategies of this species vary among populations at different temperatures. We therefore conducted long-term heat tolerance experiments on multiple populations of B. japonica tadpoles and their congenic species to determine their survivability and development speed. We observed heat tolerance differences between B. japonica/Buergeria choui and Buergeria buergeri. Buergeria japonica exhibited the highest tolerance among all species, and the Seranma hot spring population showed the highest survival rate and accelerated development speed. However, at temperatures higher than 35°C, they could not survive until the completion of metamorphosis, contrary to previous field observations. Our behavioral experiment showed attenuation of the high temperature preference of B. japonica tadpoles associated with developmental stages, suggesting that they can tolerate extreme temperatures for a limited time window during their development until metamorphosis.

Bagus Priambodo, Kento Shiraga, Ippei Harada, Hajime Ogino, and Takeshi Igawa "Long-Term Heat Tolerance and Accelerated Metamorphosis: Hot Spring Adaptations of Buergeria japonica," Zoological Science 41(5), 424-429, (27 June 2024). https://doi.org/10.2108/zs240011
Received: 13 February 2024; Accepted: 13 May 2024; Published: 27 June 2024
KEYWORDS
amphibian
behavior
heat tolerance
Hot Spring
metamorphosis
tadpole
thermal preference
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