Aparasphenodon brunoi

Jones0911

Arachnobaron
Joined
Mar 5, 2013
Messages
406
Thought this article was kind of interesting....read on...


Although many frogs and toads are known to be poisonous, i.e. deadly if their toxins are ingested, two frogs from Brazil are now known to be venomous as well, delivering their toxins through spines and spikes on their heads, a first for the four legged amphibians. Scientists that made the discovery said calculations suggest that a single gram of the venom from the more toxic species, Aparasphenodon brunoi, could kill more than 300,000 mice or about 80 humans.
The strength of toxicity of the skin secretions is remarkable, and to say we were surprised by that is an understatement," Brodie said. "Amphibians have a wide array of skin toxins that have been well-studied, but this sort of mechanism — transmitting the toxin as a venom — has not been found before. It moves the study of amphibian defenses to a new level.

Although their venom packs a wallop, scientists are convinced it is only used as a defensive mechanism as opposed to using it to hunt their prey. Since neither frog has any known predators, that is certainly a likely scenario.

To read more, check out the full article on LiveScience

Photo: Carlos Jared/Butantan Institute
 

Liverwort

Arachnopeon
Joined
Jun 6, 2015
Messages
39
Since almost all articles about these venomous frogs don't actually explain the envenomation apparatus in depth and don't show pictures (for the most part), I think these pics will be interesting. It's amazing how brunoi seems to compensate for less effective envenomation apparatus with extremely potent venom compared to the other frog (brunoi is on the left btw):



Also, the articles really aren't twisting words. These frogs really do appear to headbutt with their snouts to inject venom as a defense. They live in a part of S. america that gets arid-ish conditions part of the year, so they burrow, enter in rear-first, and block the entrance with their bony, flat, hard head.
 
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