Chris Austin, LSU:
Paedophryne Amanuensis Frog - World's smallest vertebrate
January 12, 2012
LSU’s Chris Austin recently
discovered two new species of frogs in New Guinea, one of which is now
the world’s tiniest known vertebrate, averaging only 7.7 millimeters in
size – less than one-third of an inch. It ousts Paedocypris progenetica,
an Indonesian fish averaging more than 8 millimeters, from the record.
Austin, leading a team of scientists from the United States including
LSU graduate student Eric Rittmeyer, made the discovery during a
three-month long expedition to the island of New Guinea, the world’s
largest and tallest tropical island.
“It was particularly difficult to
locate Paedophryne amauensis due to its diminutive size and the males’
high pitched insect-like mating call,” said Austin. “But it’s a great
find. New Guinea is a hotspot of biodiversity, and everything new we
discover there adds another layer to our overall understanding of how
biodiversity is generated and maintained.”
Austin, curator of herpetology at LSU’s Museum of Natural Science and
associate professor of biological sciences, is no stranger to
discovering new species, having described numerous species previously
unknown to science, including frogs, lizards and parasites.
The research, which will be published in the Public Library of Science
One journal, or PLoS, on Jan. 11, includes a second species of
diminutive frog newly named Paedophryne swiftorum that is only slightly
larger than Paedophryne amanuensis, averaging only about 8.5 millimeters
in body size.
Austin’s work, supported by the National Science Foundation, highlights
an interesting trend among the discovery of extremely small vertebrates.
“The size limit of vertebrates, or creatures with backbones, is of
considerable interest to biologists because little is understood about
the functional constraints that come with extreme body size, whether
large or small,” said Austin.
With
more than 60,000 vertebrates currently known to man, the largest being
the blue whale with an average size of more than 25 meters (75 feet) and
the smallest previously being the small Indonesian fish averaging around
8 millimeters, there was originally some thought that extreme size in
vertebrates might be associated with aquatic species, as perhaps the
buoyancy offers support and facilitates the development of extremism.
However, both new species of frogs Austin described are terrestrial,
suggesting that living in water is not necessary for small body size.
“The ecosystems these extremely small frogs occupy are very similar,
primarily inhabiting leaf litter on the floor of tropical rainforest
environments,” said Austin. “We now believe that these creatures aren’t
just biological oddities, but instead represent a previously
undocumented ecological guild – they occupy a habitat niche that no
other vertebrate does.”