1. Diet of the Introduced Greenhouse Frog in Hawaii
- Author
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Karen H. Beard and Christina A. Olson
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Aquatic Science ,Eleutherodactylus ,Plant litter ,biology.organism_classification ,Predation ,Isopoda ,Greenhouse frog ,Psocoptera ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Acari ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Invertebrate - Abstract
To determine the potential impacts of the Cuban terrestrial Greenhouse Frog, Eleutherodactylus planirostris, on native invertebrates in Hawaii, we conducted a stomach content analysis of 427 frogs from ten study sites on the island of Hawaii. At each site, we also collected invertebrates with two sampling methods, leaf litter collection and sticky traps, to determine if diets were representative of the available resources. Dominant prey items consisted of Hymenoptera: Formicidae (32.4% of total diets), Acari (19.2%), and Collembola (17.4%). Non-native invertebrate categories comprised 43.2% of their diet (Amphipoda, Isopoda, and Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Invertebrate orders that contain native species in Hawaii found most often in the stomachs included Acari (mites; 19.2%), Araneae (spiders; 3.1%), Collembola (springtails; 17.4%), and Psocoptera (booklice; 2.3%), although it is unknown whether native species of these groups were present in the stomach samples. Eleutherodactylus planirostris predominantly ...
- Published
- 2012
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