
Frogs’ lungs help them find a mate
Male frogs call to attract females, but how can females tell that it is a male of the same species calling? Green tree frogs use the same principle as in noise-cancelling headphones – and they are far better at it.
Anyone who has been near a lake or a waterhole with frogs knows that frogs can make a real racket. The males croak to attract females and to defend good calling spots against other males.
Often several different species are calling at the same time, and there is also noise from wind, water, traffic, people, machines etc.
So how can the coveted females hear the males calling? And distinguish between the different species? And, ultimately, assess whether the call comes from a male that is worth leaping for?
Frogs have a special ear
Frogs do not have external ears, but pick up sounds with an eardrum, just like we do. A distinctive feature of frogs (and lizards and birds) is that the two eardrums can affect each other acoustically – the sound literally goes in one ear out the other.
This coupling of the ears makes them directionally sensitive, and frogs are unique in that sound can also reach the eardrums through the lungs and amplify or attenuate the vibrations of the eardrums.
So, one could say that frogs also hear with their lungs. But what exactly can they hear with their lungs?
Ancient and super sophisticated
Researchers now believe this mystery has been solved in a new study of American green tree frogs (Hyla cinerea), published in Current Biology.
One of the researchers behind the study is biologist and expert in frog hearing, Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard from the University of Southern Denmark.
One theory has been that pulmonary hearing is intended to locate sound sources. But according to Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard, the purpose is something completely different: to sort out certain sounds – just like when we put on noise-cancelling headphones in an open-plan office.
Meet the researcher
Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard is an Associate Professor and expert in animal hearing at the Department of Biology.