Login
Copyright (c) 2013 by Zac Conditions of Use    Privacy Policy Return to Blogmeister
files/ Zac -- Blogmeister

RockYou FXText





by Zac teacher: Andrew Topp


Blog Entries
6/21 Camp Fairy Tale.
11/21 Sumatran Tiger Quiz
11/17 Sumatran Tiger
11/3 Chimp Art
10/12 Sumatran Tiger
8/25 Poem
7/21 Get out of the House
7/18 My Andy Warhol Printing
6/27 The Phantom Coach
6/17 The Scarecrow
3/23 Chuck close
9/17 Jet Powered Prime
8/16 My Weekend
6/29 Report Writing
6/23 Lego Indiana Jones
6/23 Zacs Favourite Things
6/18 Favourite tv shows
6/18 Harry Potter
6/18 J.K Rowling 2
6/18 lego
6/15 My Time
6/14 Jungle Trip
6/7 J.K. Rowling
6/4 MY AWSM websites!!
6/4 Dart Frog Profile
6/4 Fast Facts of Dart Frog

List 25, 50, all

Conditions of Use


Dart Frog Profile Poison dart frogs, members of the Dendrobatidae family, wear some of the most brilliant and beautiful colors on Earth. Depending on individual habitats, which extend from the tropical forests of Costa Rica to Brazil, their coloring can be yellow, gold, copper, red, green, blue, or black. Their elaborate designs and hues are deliberately ostentatious to ward off potential predators, a tactic called aposematic coloration.

Some species display unusual parenting habits, including carrying both eggs and tadpoles on their backs. Although this "backpacking" is not unique among amphibians, male poison arrow frogs are exceptional in their care, attending to the clutch, sometimes exclusively, and performing vital transportation duties.

Dendrobatids include some of the most toxic animals on Earth. The two-inch-long (five-centimeter-long) golden poison dart frog has enough venom to kill 10 grown men. Indigenous Emberá people of Colombia have used its powerful venom for centuries to tip their blowgun darts when hunting, hence the genus' common name.

Scientists are unsure of the source of poison dart frogs' toxicity, but it is possible they assimilate plant poisons which are carried by their prey, including ants, termites and beetles. Poison dart frogs raised in captivity and isolated from insects in their native habitat never develop venom.

The medical research community has been exploring possible medicinal uses for some poison dart frog venom. They have already developed a synthetic version of one compound that shows promise as a painkiller.

Article posted June 4, 2009 at 05:02 PM • comment • Reads 177 • see all articles




Latest 10 Comments:
awsome pic! where di
Your blog is cool as
Awesome transformer.
zac your blog is coo
Zac, your my best fr
Awesome!!
cool pic keep up the
coolblg zac !!!!!!!!
great blog name zac
I like your work ver
Login
Copyright (c) 2013 by Zac Conditions of Use    Privacy Policy Return to Blogmeister