A recent study in the journal Nature Climate Change found that severe increases in aridity caused by climate change is drying out frog habitats across the globe. In fact, unless humans significantly ...
Male Sierran chorus frogs change their breeding calls depending on the temperature, a UC Davis study found. (BenderPhoto, Getty Images) When the time is right, a good love song can make all the ...
On warm spring nights across North America, male frogs belt out their distinctive mating calls from ponds and wetlands. But those chirps and croaks may not just be pickup lines. They might partially ...
The worldwide decline in frog populations is due to a fast-spreading infection, but people also play a role. A foothill yellow-legged frog. Image courtesy: Brome McCreary Up to only a few inches in ...
Scientists became aware of extinctions in various frog species in the 1980s, when J. Alan Pounds and colleagues reported the disappearances of golden toads (Bufo periglenes) and harlequin frogs ...
A tiny frog may be the key to hundreds of species surviving climate change, suggests a new study. Puddle frogs show that protecting genetic variation is "essential" for animals to live through global ...
Scientists suggest female frogs listen for changes in the male calls as a signal for when it's warm enough to mate.
Crawfish frog numbers are on decline due to habitat loss. But scientists in Indiana are working to return species to a historic site. When frogs start disappearing from a place that they've been in ...