A Field Study of the Kansas Ant-Eating Frog, Gastrophryne olivacea
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About This Book
A concise field account describes the ecology and life history of a small, secretive ant‑eating frog in northeastern Kansas, covering habitat, subterranean behavior, thermal relationships, breeding phenology, egg and larval development, growth, coloration, movements, diet, and predation. Based on field observations and mark‑recapture records, the study shows that the species can represent substantial biomass locally, that growth and size vary among cohorts and populations, that breeding is tied to heavy rains and suppressed by drought, and that juveniles are darker with a leaflike middorsal mark that fades as individuals mature.
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