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RAUK - Archived Forum - First Frogspawn

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First Frogspawn:

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will j
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Joined: 06 Aug 2005
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Posted: 26 Jan 2010

Hi Guys,

Whilst out birding on the Lizard Penninsula, Cornwall I found several clumps of frogspawn. By far the earliest i've found it before, but then again, stuff will be earlier down here than in Shropshire!

This was on the 24th, not far from Garras.


Birder from Shropshire, adrift in Cornwall!
herpetologic2
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Joined: 15 Jun 2004
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Posted: 26 Jan 2010
Excellent - report it on the
nature's
calendar
website!




J
Vice Chair of ARG UK - self employed consultant -
visit ARG UK & Alresford Wildlife
frogworlduk
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Joined: 19 Aug 2003
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Posted: 28 Jan 2010
nice find. bloomin early as well.
will j
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Posted: 30 Jan 2010
I've found out today that the common frogs on the Lizard are the only ones in the country to regularly have two breeding seasons a year. The first being in Januay, the second around April time. My birding mate has found spawn as early as about the 9th this year (he couldn't remember the exact date)
Birder from Shropshire, adrift in Cornwall!
will
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Posted: 31 Jan 2010
That's really interesting - I have never heard of two spawnings per year in common frog (though I think there are some records of natterjack doing this in the UK).  Do you know for sure if the same frogs are spawning twice or if its just that those on the Lizard spawn in Jan and those up at the top of Bodmin, say, are forced to spawn later in the spring ?
Cheers
Will

frogworlduk
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Posted: 31 Jan 2010
or it could be a different set of frogs spawning later. although you still get a mass spawning, there is nothing to say that some would prefer to come out later.
will j
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Posted: 31 Jan 2010

there are definitely two spawnings on the Lizard, whether that means the adults breed twice a year, or if they are different "sub populations" (for want of a better word) i'm still unsure, both would seem plausable.

I shall endevour to find out


Birder from Shropshire, adrift in Cornwall!
frogworlduk
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Posted: 01 Feb 2010
would be an interesting one to study
will
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Posted: 01 Feb 2010
Certainly would be interesting - maybe there are two strategies operating - ie early breeders which risk spawn dying in ice, but which stand to gain if there's no frost, and later spawners which play safe, but which may lose out to competition from larger tadpoles (perhaps that's why they wait til April ?)  I'd really like to know more about those April spawners, as they seem to contradict the received wisdom that common frogs are explosive breeders at the very earliest possibility at the start of spring.
Matt Harris
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Joined: 03 Jun 2003
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Posted: 01 Feb 2010
The last few years there have been two spawning events each spring here in south Wales - batches of fresh spawn adjacent to batches of spawn which is evidently well developed. Ive put it down to a cold snap interrupting the spawning activty, but who knows?

I've heard no reports of spawn here yet, but expecitng some very soon.
Gwent Amphibian and Reptile Group (GARG)
will
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Posted: 02 Feb 2010

Hi Matt

My hunch would be that the S Wales phenomenon is, as you suggest, that normal spawning is temporarily interrupted by a cold spell.  I think this often happens with a species that breeds 'on the edge' in thermal terms.  The Cornish situation, with some frogs spawning for the first or perhaps second time in April sounds different to me, but we need more observations, I guess

Cheers


Caleb
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Joined: 17 Feb 2003
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Posted: 03 Feb 2010
I've occasionally seen separated spawnings up here in Durham, and would agree that this seems to be normal spawning interrupted by weather conditions- I think the biggest gap has been about 10 days.

The Cornish situation does sound very different. It would be particularly interesting to know whether the same frogs consistently breed early or late- if so, then you'd effectively have two populations with very little genetic mixing.

Anyone interested in the factors that influence date of spawning would do well to read Maxwell Savage's book (now available for free online here)- he comes to some interesting conclusions, and is particularly harsh on the suggestion that temperature directly affects spawning date.
will
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Posted: 04 Feb 2010

It's a long time since I read Maxwell Savage's book, but I seem to remember that he was the first person to correlate spawning dates with isotherms; if I remember rightly he argued that spawning corresponded with glycolic acid released by algae, which he reckoned frogs could smell, thereby luring them to ponds.  I'm not sure anyone has proved that frogs can smell metabolically active algae under controlled (lab ?) conditions.  Personally I reckon there's a direct link between mild and wet weather, probably with some element of daylength to prevent spawning in November (although frogs do sometimes go into amplexus in autumn)

On the subject of little interbreeding between two populations of frogs - call them early and late spawning cohorts, maybe there could be some mileage in investigating whether there is true reproductive isolation - this could lead eventually to separate species, like the common and soprano pipistrelle.  But you'd need to confirm that late spawning females and also males were not interbreeding with the early ones and vice-versa for this to be the case.  Unlikely, perhaps, but intriguing if there is a genuine April spawning.


Caleb
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Posted: 05 Feb 2010
Yes, his main hypothesis was that the presence of strong algal growth in a pond was the trigger for spawning, and he did suggest the smell of glycolic acid as a possible mechanism for this.

I'd agree with mild & wet weather as a general rule, but (as Savage suggests) spawning seems to require a certain period of weather like this- a couple of days does not seem long enough. In my experience, once spawning's started, it will continue if the weather turns slightly harsher- it seems to require really nasty conditions to create a gap in spawning.

I'm not so sure about daylength- after all, daylength in November is much the same as in February (unless the positive change in daylength is the trigger).

I think it's been shown that a cold period is necessary for gonad maturation in a number of temperate amphibian species- this would certainly be a bar to autumn spawnings.


will
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Joined: 27 Feb 2007
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Posted: 05 Feb 2010

Hi Caleb

Yes, I should have specified I meant 'increase in daylength' - a bit like some flowering plants use for determining when to flower.  I agree that a cold period is probably needed for spawning, too - although maybe not too long if Cornish frogs often spawn in late December/ early January.


Bullseye
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Posted: 24 Feb 2010
23;15 hrs,Just crept down to my pond as I could hear males calling,half a dozen or so there,rescued female from road last night,water and air temp only about 4-5 c.If they start spawning soon it's earlier than last year,even though it's colder !.
"I'm not saying there shoud be capital punishment for stupidity,but why don't we take the safety labels off and let the issue resolve itself ?."
Suzi
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Posted: 25 Feb 2010
East Devon
Clump of frogspawn appeared overnight 23/24th in my pond. This morning another clump had appeared on top of the first. There are too many pests in my pond for the spawn to come to anything so I shall remove it and rear it in another container.
Night and day temps have come up very warm the past couple days. I'm sure it is no coincidence spawn has now appeared.

Suz
Caleb
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Posted: 26 Feb 2010
First clump of spawn in Gateshead today- 9 days later than 2009. We've had a lot of rain over the last couple of days, but temperatures are still lower than they were a couple of weeks ago.
Suzi
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Posted: 26 Feb 2010
Another three clumps in my pond this morning. Still very mild here.
Suz
Bullseye
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Joined: 04 Apr 2007
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Posted: 27 Feb 2010
East Sussex here btw, males still calling,much milder but don't expect spawn for at least a week or so.
"I'm not saying there shoud be capital punishment for stupidity,but why don't we take the safety labels off and let the issue resolve itself ?."

- First Frogspawn

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