Removing the rubbish: frogs eliminate foreign objects from the body cavity through the bladder.

Abstract:

:During the course of a telemetry study on three species of Australian frogs (Litoria caerulea, Litoria dahlii and Cyclorana australis), we found that many of the surgically implanted transmitters had migrated into the bladder. We subsequently implanted small beads into L. caerulea and they were expelled from the body in 10-23 days. Beads implanted into cane toads (Rhinella marina) to document the process were either expelled or were enveloped into the bladder. This appears to be a unique pathway for expulsion of foreign objects from the body, and suggests that caution should be employed in telemetry studies when interpreting the separation of some animals from their transmitters as a mortality event.

journal_name

Biol Lett

journal_title

Biology letters

authors

Tracy CR,Christian KA,McArthur LJ,Gienger CM

doi

10.1098/rsbl.2010.0877

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2011-06-23 00:00:00

pages

465-7

issue

3

eissn

1744-9561

issn

1744-957X

pii

rsbl.2010.0877

journal_volume

7

pub_type

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