| The day of the frogs |
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By Francesco Tomasinelli & Emanuele Biggi Updated 1/07/2008 There is a small pool, lost in the Italian Northern Apennines, about 1500 mt above sea level. A pond where hundreds common frogs (Rana temporaria) come to breed each year in the first days of Spring. Similar things occur in other humid areas in the mountains but here, thank to a lack of disturbance, this phenomenon takes immense proportions. The melting snow triggers the assault of the frogs from the nearby beech forest where they hibernate. Into the water, still filled with snow and melting ice, they wildly mate in big numbers. Several males could grasp a single female, sometimes taking her to death by suffocation. The water is filled with eggs, so many that the frogs can crawl on them without touching the water. In a few days this gigantic orgy comes to an end, with most frogs dispersing on the shores of the lake and in small streams. Now millions of tadpoles live into the pond. They’ll have a hard life because many predators will try to forage on them, but their number will keep some of them safe, lowering the individual probability to be predated. During summer the pond will host the new generation, hundreds of small froglets that will emerge from water in search of a good meal, a nice place to stay and, later, a mate to breed. A special thanks to Claudio Pia for his precious advices and to Sara Costa for helping on taking these pictures |
16-12-2011 Two new short stories in "Strange but true" with tiger beetles and devil flower mantis. Updated Quirimbas Islands reportage 30-4-2011 New scientific exhibition Predatori del microcosmo at Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali, Torino, until 27-6-2011
03-02-2011 New scientific exhibition Copioni e copiati for Arte e Scienza in Piazza 2011, in Bologna, until 13-02-2011. 08-1-2011 New photo gallery on Iran and persian architecture 05-12-2010 New scientific exhibition Predatori del microcosmo at Museo Tridentino di Scienze Naturali, Trento, until 13-2-2011 29-11-2010 New gallery Professione naturalista, on people working in natural sciences 28-10-2010 New scientific exhibition Copioni e copiati, for Festival della Scienza 2010, at Castello d'Albertis, Genova, until 5-12-2010
13-09-2010 New gallery on Valley of Butterflies, Rhodes, Greece |
| Welcome to Isopoda.net, website of Italian biologist and science photographer Francesco Tomasinelli. My favourite photographic subjects are unusual animals, travels and scientists at work, but I shoot many other topics, like sports, events and corporate pictures. I work as scientific consultant too, mainly on ecology topics. |