| Literature DB >> 27688972 |
Abstract
African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) are often referred to as 'purely aquatic' but there are many publications which suggest extensive overland movements. Previous reviews which considered the topic have not answered the following questions: (1) is there evidence for overland dispersal in native and invasive ranges; (2) what is the range of distances moved overland; (3) when does overland movement occur; and (4) is there evidence of breeding migratory behaviour? A systematic review was chosen to synthesise and critically analyse all literature on the overland movement in Xenopus laevis. Database searches resulted in 57 documents which revealed a paucity of empirical studies, with 28 containing no data, and 19 having anecdotal content. Overwhelming evidence shows that both native and invasive populations of X. laevis move overland, with well documented examples for several other members of the genus (X. borealis, X. gilli, X. muelleri, X. fraseriand X. tropicalis). Reports of distances moved overland were from 40 m to 2 km, with no apparent difference between native and invasive ranges. Overland movements are not confined to wet seasons or conditions, but the literature suggests that moving overland does not occur in the middle of the day. Migrations to temporary water-bodies for breeding have been suggested, but without any corroborating data.Entities:
Keywords: Aquatic; Clawed frogs; Dispersal; Migration; Pipidae; Terrestrial
Year: 2016 PMID: 27688972 PMCID: PMC5036101 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Prisma flow-diagram (see Moher et al., 2009) for literature included in this study.
Flow-diagram for literature on Xenopus overland movement included in this study.
Overland distances moved by Xenopus species recorded in the literature.
| Reference | Species | Number of individuals | Distance reported (km) | Data type | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unspecified | 0.45 | Anecdotal | Indigenous | ||
| >14 | 0.9 | Anecdotal | Indigenous | ||
| 1 | 0.02 | Anecdotal | Indigenous | ||
| Unspecified | 0.8 | Anecdotal | Invasive | ||
| 11 | 0.9 | Mark-recapture | Indigenous | ||
| Thousands | 1.0 | Anecdotal | Indigenous | ||
| 55 (21% of recaptures) | 0.2 (within 48 hrs) 0.75, 1.5 & 2.0 (direct distance) | Mark-recapture | Invasive | ||
| 1 | 0.04 | Anecdotal | Invasive | ||
| Hundreds | 0.1–0.18 | Anecdotal | Invasive | ||
| 1 | 0.08 | Mark-recapture | Invasive | ||
| Unspecified | 0.48 | Distributional | Invasive |
Notes.
These sources report the same data.
Figure 2Network visualisation for Xenopus overland movement literature.
A network visualisation of literature mentioning overland movement in Xenopus using Gephi. Literature is sorted into that with data (left): anecdotal (squares), distributional (triangles), and mark-recapture (stars); literature reviews (middle: hexagons); and literature which does not have original data on overland movement in Xenopus (circles: right). Different species of Xenopus are denoted by different colours, and indigenous X. laevis (blue filled symbol) are differentiated from invasive populations (red filled blue symbol). Other species are coded as other colours: X. muelleri (green), X. borealis (pink), X. gilli (yellow), X. fraseri (grey), X. clivii (purple) and X. tropicalis (cyan). Curves connecting nodes denote the direction of the citation: above the line (right to left) or below the line (left to right). Nodes which are not connected represent literature which does not cite and has not been cited in relation to Xenopus movement overland. For complete references to the citations, please refer to Supplemental Information.