Animals have developed many different adaptations to local environmental conditions to maximize their fitness, i.e. their probability of survival and reproductive success. These strategies can differ among individuals in a population, populations within species as well as between closely related species, and in the long term, contribute to divergence and speciation. Neotropical poison frogs of the family Dendrobatidae differ e.g. in color, behavior (e.g. territoriality, mate choice, personality), their ecology and their toxicity among populations. Among other things, we examine their strategies for avoiding predators. Some populations are more conspicuously colored and more toxic (aposematic), while others are cryptically colored and non-toxic. These morphological properties correlate with differences in behavior, differences on the molecular and physiological level and together establish the concept of the "aposematic phenotype". Which ecological factors led to these divergences is still unknown and this question will be integrated into future research projects.

Other groups of amphibians are aposematic and cryptic at the same time. Yellow-bellied toads, for example, are dorsally cryptic, but have a highly contrasting yellow-black belly as well as skin glands filled with toxins. Variations between populations are less pronounced, but toads can maximize their dorsal crypsis on different substrates by plastically changing their coloration. However, these animals suffer from severe population declines due to habitat loss and fragmentation. Research into molecular as well as ecological differences and their adaptations to different habitats should help to protect this endangered species in the long term.

The interaction of long-term adaptations (molecular fixation) and plastic reactions to different environmental conditions is difficult to disentangle. These interactions form the basis for evolutionary changes and must be better understood; also with regard to the ability of animals to adapt to changing environmental conditions.

Heike Pröhl
Heike Pröhl © Sönke Von den Berg
Apl. Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Heike Pröhl
Apl. Professorin
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+49 511 953-8431
fax
+49 511 953-8586

Geno- and Phenotypes of aposematic poison frogs

Frogs
Frogs. © Heike Pröhl

Ecology, species conservation and population genetics of amphibia and tree frogs

Yellow-bellied toad
Yellow-bellied toad @ Heike Pröhl

Behavioural ecology and personality of poison frog

Pfeilgiftfrosch
Pfeilgiftfrosch @ Heike Pröhl

Methods to employ

Verhalten:

  • Verhaltensbeobachtungen im Freiland
  • Videoüberwachung von Verhalten im Labor
  • Bioakustische Aufnahmen, Auswertungen und Playbackexperimente
  • Partnerwahlexperimente

Ökologie:

  • Spektrometrische Vermessung von Substraten und Tieren
  • Farbanalysen und Visuelle Modellierung
  • Mark-Recapture Studien
  • Prädationsexperimente

Populationsgenetik:

  • PCR, Genotyping
  • Populationsgenetische Auswertungen mit Mikrosatelliten und SNPs
  • Phylogenetische Analysen basierend auf Gensequenzen

Molekulargenetik:

  • NGS: Differentielle Genexpression (RNASeq)
  • Real-time RT PCR

The Team

Head: apl. Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Heike Pröhl

Dr. rer. nat Ariel Rodriguez

 

PhD

Anaisa Cajigas Gandia

Vasiliki Mantzana Oikonomaki 

Juliane Monteiro (extern)

 

Master students

Mats Wiborg

Luca Kehrt

 

Bachelor students

Khalaf Rasho

Lena Ullrich

Mona Hedrich

 

Alumni

Ricardo Cossio

Jasmin Kleißen

Dr. rer. nat. Beate Röll

Publications

Pröhl, H., Scherm, M. G., Meneses, S., Dreher, C. E., Meuche, I., & Rodríguez, A. (2019). Female-female aggression is linked to food defence in a poison frog. Ethology, 125(4), 222–231. https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.12848
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Riedner, D., Weißmann, A., Höppner, C., Buschmann, H., & Pröhl, H. (2019). Struktur und Entwicklung der größten Subpopulation der Gelbbauchunke (Bombina variegata) in Niedersachsen. Zeitschrift für Feldherpetologie, 26(1), 21–40. https://shop.laurenti.de/product_info.php?products_id=1065
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Rößler, D. C. ;, Lötters, S., Mappes, J., Valkonen, J., Menin, M., Lima, A. P., & Pröhl, H. (2019). These soles are made for warning: an uncommon case of aposematism in a Neotropical toad. In 14th Annual Meeting of the Ethologische Gesellschaft. https://www.etho-ges.de/wordpress/de/meetings/
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Rößler, D. C., Lötters, S., Mappes, J., Valkonen, J. K., Menin, M., Lima, A. P., & Pröhl, H. (2019). Sole coloration as an unusual aposematic signal in a Neotropical toad. Scientific Reports, 9(1: 1128). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-37705-1
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Sanchez, E., Pröhl, H., Lüddecke, T., Schulz, S., Steinfartz, S., & Vences, M. (2019). The conspicuous postmetamorphic coloration of fire salamanders, but not their toxicity, is affected by larval background albedo. Journal of Experimental Zoology / B, 332(1–2), 26–35. https://doi.org/10.1002/jez.b.22845
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Yang, Y., Blomenkamp, S., Dugas, M. B., Richards-Zawacki, C. L., & Pröhl, H. (2019). Mate choice versus mate preference: inferences about color-assortative mating differ between field and lab assays of poison frog behavior. The American Naturalist, 193(4), 598–607. https://doi.org/10.1086/702249
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