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Thread: A waffling post with some Taiwan frogs

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    Default A waffling post with some Taiwan frogs

    Hi all. Just thought I'd post some pics from a few recent trips to the hills around Taipei, Taiwan. No new frogs for me, but it's always like meeting old friends when I get out for the first time of the year and see the familiar faces, snouts, whatever.

    Oh, and apologies in advance ... this will probably be a bit of a rambling post. I have time on my hands and no life.

    First up, a trip to the hills about 30km south of Taipei. The main town here is Wulai, a rather touristy "aboriginal" village popular with day-tripping Taipei residents, but south of town the terrain gets quite rugged and wild. My target here, a few weeks ago, was to try to find Rhacophorus moltrechti. I'd seen this endemic tree frog further south, and although it doesn't live in the immediate vicinity of Taipei (that I know of), I reckoned it had to live somewhere closer than where I'd seen it previously.

    So, hiking after dark along a path, I was cheered to hear a wheezing croak coming from the bottom of a slope. There were a few frogs in a puddle atop a tarp-covered water tank, including a couple of R. moltrechti. I like this species for its striking red legs and underbelly, possibly a flash colouration mechanism for startling predators, though perversely the individual shown below didn't have any red patches at all. I should have eaten him to teach him a lesson and improve the quality of the gene pool.



    (The big challenge in getting nice pictures of frogs here is to try to frame them so they don't include styrofoam, tarps, plastic buckets, cigarettes, etc. Annoyingly difficult, as much of the frog breeding habitat is on the fringes of human settlements, utilising things like old bins, boxes, containers. More on that later.)

    Another frog commonly heard grumbling in the ditches is Limnonectes fujianensis, part of the poorly-defined Limnonectes (formerly Rana) kuhlii complex, sometimes referred to as "big-headed" or "fanged" frogs. I never used to give these much thought, but they're actually pretty cool. One of not many species in which the male is significantly larger than the female, and some of the males' noggins are absolutely huge! (There's even a Limnonectes larvaepartus in Indonesia that gives birth to live tadpoles. But this isn't it. Nothing to do with this one in fact. Don't know why I brought it up. But pretty cool, eh?) And, as per the name, the males also have fangs (for fighting with other males over females, rather than drinking blood).

    I should just note: I cannot get a decent, unshaky photo of this species!


    Further back along the path, there were many Kurixalus idiootocus, chirping from the bushes. Very common, but endemic to Taiwan.



    And another couple of R. moltrechti, only one of which was visible. Males tend to dig themselves into little muddy hollows under rocks and suchlike before calling, and I didn't want to disturb the guy who was hiding.


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  4. #2

    Default Re: A waffling post with some Taiwan frogs

    On the way back I stopped off at a hill just outside of Xindian, a suburb of Taipei City. There's a small-scale farming area there, again with lots of buckets, boxes, etc. These seem to be used as water containers in case of drought (such as the one Taiwan had been suffering for some time), which can be quite convenient for frogs looking to lay eggs. I used to think these farmers were good stewards of the tadpoles, some of which are protected species, but I'm not so sure now. Again, more on this later.

    Anyway, it was raining, so there were quite a few species to be seen. More of that damned man-made stuff in almost all the pictures.

    Polypedates braueri. Trying to hide behind a leaf? Not a chance mate!



    Hylarana latouchii.



    A sleeping, resting, or possibly wide-awake japalura. I could try to find out exactly which species this is, but I probably won't.


    The emerald tree frog, Rhacophorus prasinatus, Class III protected species, and endemic to northern Taiwan.



    And the always bold Bufo bankorensis. Common as muck, but found only in Taiwan.



    A few days later I had an early morning walk in YangMingShan National Park, just north of Taipei. No frogs this time, but a few reptiles, most of which I was too slow to photograph.

    Another japalura I'm too lazy to identify.


    And, I think, a mock viper (Psammodynastes pulverulentus) right in the middle of the path. I shooed it off before any lethal snake-fearing hikers passed by. I've seen enough smashed snakes to know that some people will kill any snake they meet. This one is rear-fanged and mildly venomous, and as the name suggests mimics true vipers as a means of defense. That's if I'm right about its being a mock viper, of course. If it isn't, just ignore all that.




    Okay, back to Wulai and Xindian a couple of weeks later. Another rainy day. First stop, south of Wulai. (Actually, that makes it sound easier than it really is ... by public transport there are quite a few stops along the way.) Same spot as before, and more (or the same) R. moltrechti. And more styrofoam and tarps.


    Another big-headed, big-fanged Limnonectes fujianensis, and another crappy picture.


    Further back on the path, more tree frogs.

    The "Japanese" Buerger's frog, Buergeria japonica. Although it's a Rhacophorid, as far as I know it doesn't usually hang out in trees. I've never seen one in a tree anyway. It has a few interesting quirks ... some populations take advantage of hot springs to breed year-round, with water getting up to 40 degrees C. They'll also breed in coastal areas, albeit in only mildly brackish water.


    More Kurixalus idiootocus.


    At a similar spot as the last time, probably the same R. moltrechti, striking similar poses, but on the other side of the path. Show off.



    And a robust Buerger's frog, Buergeria robusta. I've seen males of this endemic species further south that were bright yellow. (I've even posted pictures of them here somewhere.) I don't know if that's a geographical thing, or more to do with their being in breeding mode. Probably the latter.


    And farther along the road, an emerald tree frog. I was puzzled by it at first ... a much darker shade of green than I'd previously seen. It looks pretty bright in this picture though.


    Back in Xindian, it was rainy but cold. I was surprised by the lack of frogs calling on the hill. Just a little too cold, I guessed. I noticed that a few of the tadpole-filled buckets from a couple of weeks before looked much emptier, of both water and tadpoles (especially of R. prasinatus). This was after a week of blisteringly hot weather, and the imposition of water restrictions on parts of New Taipei City, and it looked like the farmers had been using the stored water for their crops. I've no idea about the legal status of this in regards to tadpoles of a protected species, or even if the relevant authorities know about the presence of R. prasinatus (or if do, if they care) ... I'll have to look into it.

    Anyway, there were a few additions to last time. Fejervarya limnocharis ... looking very gravid ...


    And the local torrent frog, the whistling Odorrana swinhoana, endemic to Taiwan.


    I wasn't finished with Xindian though. A week later, once again in wet - but this time warmer - weather, I went back to the hill, curious to see if the conditions had brought out one of my favourites, the rasping Microhyla fissipes. And it had.




    Okay, that's enough for now. Thanks for looking if you made it this far. (Which you obviously did, or you wouldn't be reading this.) And sorry that it was - as suspected - a seriously rambling post. I hope there was some interesting information in among the word spaghetti.

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