Online Encyclopedia

ALYTES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 776 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALYTES  , the

midwife
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toad, first discovered by P . Demours in 1741, on the border of a small pond in the Jardin
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des Plantes, in the very act of parturition which has rendered it famous, and described as Petit crapaud male accoucheur de sa femelle . Alytes obstetricans is of
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special
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interest as the first known example of paternal solicitude in Batrachians, and although many no less wonderful cases of
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nursing
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instinct have since been revealed to us, it remains the only one among
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European forms . Alytes obstetricans is a small toad-like Batrachian, two inches in length, of dull greyish coloration, plump form with warty skin and large eyes with vertical pupils . Although toad-like it is not really related to the toads proper, but belongs to the
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family Discoglossidae, characterized by a circular, adherent tongue, teeth in the upper jaw and on the palate, short but distinct ribs on the anterior vertebrae, and
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convex-
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concave vertebrae . It inhabits France, Belgium,
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Switzerland, Western Germany (east-wards to the Weser), Spain and
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Portugal . A second
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species, A. cisternasii, occurs in Spain and Portugal . A lytes is nocturnal and slow in its movements . It is thoroughly terrestrial, selecting for its retreat in the daytime holes made by small mammals, or interstices between stones . Towards evening it reveals its presence by a clear whistling note, which has often been compared to the sound of a little bell, or to a
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chime when produced by numerous individuals . The breeding season lasts throughout spring and summer, and the
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female is able to spawn two, three or even four times in the
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year . Pairing and oviposition take place on
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land; the male seizes the female round the
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waist .

The eggs are large and yellow, and produced in two

rosary-like strings, as if strung together by elastic filaments continuous with the gelatinous capsules . After impregnation, the male twists them round his legs and returns to his usual retreat, going about at
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night in order to feed himself and to keep up the moisture'of the eggs, even resorting to a short immersion in the
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water during exceptionally dry nights . The development of the embryo within the egg takes about three weeks . When the time foredosion has come, the male enters the water with his burden; the larvae, in the full
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tadpole condition, measuring 14 to 17 millimetres, bite their way through their tough envelope, which is not abandoned by the
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father until all the young are liberated, and
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complete in the ordinary way their
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metamorphosis . The tadpoles grow to a large
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size considering that of the adult, the
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body equalling in size a sparrow's or even a small
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pigeon's egg, and they often remain more than a year in that condition . See A. de 1'Isle, " Memoire sur
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les mceurs et l'accouchement de 1'Alytes obstetricans,"
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Ann . Sci . Nat . (6) iii . 1876; G . A . Boulenger .

Tailless Batrachians of

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Europe (Ray Society, 1897) . (G . A .

End of Article: ALYTES
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