Brachycephalus pitanga, the red pumpkin toadlet, is a small and brightly coloured species of anuran in the family Brachycephalidae. It is endemic to Atlantic rainforests in São Paulo state of southeastern Brazil
This red pumpkin toadlet was filmed at Serra do Mar State Park - Santa Virgínia Nucleus. In the images we can see two of his defense behaviors, which is rubbing his paw over his eye and opening his mouth.
A pair of very silly images, but big time dumps for me nonetheless!
The two pieces dramatically depict the creation and reveal of an infamous homebrew monster in a ongoing DnD campaign that is the culmination of a running joke within our circle of dorks.
If ya got questions... I don't guarantee any answers. XD
Till next time!
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I spent part of yesterday helping a couple of friends with some much-needed yard work in preparation for spring. No, these aren't the friends in question--they're two frogs I ran across in the process! On the left is a northern red-legged frog (Rana aurora), while the green one on the right is a Pacific tree frog (Pseudacris regilla). Both are quite small, under two inches long.
I felt bad for disturbing them, but with temperatures in the fifties it was warm enough they could relocate themselves to someplace safe before nightfall. (The yard is full of all sorts of great little hidey-holes if you are a small critter.) And all the debris that was picked up just ended up in the compost heap, so any invertebrates hiding there would still be safe, since nothing gets bagged up or burned.
I want to say spring is here early, but we're getting a cold front moving in early next week, so it'll be time to batten everything down again. Still, we're due for much milder conditions than lots of other folks this time of year, so I'm not complaining.
Sometimes i look at the leddlabs tag and i go "damn i swear ive drawn these guys more than this" and then i remember the 60 frames of half-finished animatic i keep forgetting about. There's so many good lab rats hiding in there. Here's some of my favorites.
in case you're curious: no I have not been drawing. however. im starting to feel the itch again
not gonna indulge until I finish my grad school applications. should I have listened to people when they told me to do this back in september? probably. but here we are
more or less given to wandering, in comparatively barren fields
As our knowledge of any group of animals increases the desirability of devising new methods or of applying old ones in new ways becomes more evident. This we must do in order to extend our information along an ever increasing front and to avoid degenerating into puttering in comparatively barren fields. This becomes especially patent in the pursuit of experimental zoology and more particularly so in experimental field zoology. Work on the life histories and habits of anurans in tropical America along conventional lines brought this thought home most forcibly to the senior author...
ex C. M. Breder, Jr., (“with the collaboration of Ruth B. Breder and Albert C. Redmond”), “Frog Tagging : A method of studying anuran life habits,” in Zoologica 9:3 (September 29, 1927) : 201 : link
same (Michigan copy) via hathitrust : link
Charles Marcus Breder (1897-1983)
American Museum of Natural History, brief bio and cv : link
—
Considering the voluntary movements of these frogs which was the more special object of study at this locality we again have a great expression of individuality to deal with, more apparent here on account of the greater number of observations...
taken (and combined) from pages 216 and 218, showing movements of frogs B-105 through B-143 (incomplete) : link
Breder —
A perusal of the above tabulation of activity and an examination of Fig. 274 will show at once that the voluntary movements of these frogs, more or less given to wandering, cannot be considered as a migration or even a seasonal movement induced by changing weather conditions for these is not sufficient unanimity of direction or time of movement to permit of such an interpretation.
p220 : link
What caused one (B-106) to move so far upstream as to be opposite pool “B” we do not pretend to know. To infer that they move about when they do for the pure desire to change their location is rather anthropomorphic and begs the question. Therefore we disclaim the ability to explain, as yet, these wanderings.