Climate Change Makes Sierran Treefrog Calls 'Sexier,' Impacting Reproduction Timing

February 12, 2026
Climate Change Makes Sierran Treefrog Calls 'Sexier,' Impacting Reproduction Timing
  • Published in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, the study informs how climate change affects amphibian breeding phenology and may guide broader phenological research across species.

  • Females may assess environmental suitability for reproduction by listening to the quality and tempo of male Sierran treefrog songs, a process influenced by warming ponds across the season.

  • Researchers at Quail Ridge Ecological Reserve and Lassen Field Station recorded frog calls to link water temperature with breeding vocalizations, showing how temperature drives call patterns.

  • Climate change is altering frog mating calls by speeding up tempo and improving perceived quality, making male calls sound more “sexy” as temperatures rise.

  • The project was led by UC Davis graduate student Juliann e Pekny, with senior author UC Davis Professor Eric Post and coauthor Brian Todd, and funded by multiple grants and endowments, including the Mildred E. Mathias Graduate Student Research Grant.

  • Conservation implications are critical, since roughly 41% of amphibian species are threatened, and understanding breeding timing under warming is essential for planning.

  • These findings offer potential conservation insights by improving knowledge of how warming affects breeding timing in amphibians.

  • Co-authors include Brian Todd and Eric Post, framing breeding timing as influenced by environmental cues embedded in frog songs.

  • Early, abundant male choruses draw in females, but females time their arrival to maximize egg survival, making timing a crucial factor for reproduction.

  • Humans can perceive shifts in frog calls over weeks, highlighting detectable changes in acoustic communication tied to climate-driven timing.

  • Findings could extend to other taxa, such as insects with mating calls, suggesting broader implications for climate-related shifts in reproductive timing.

  • The work could reshape views on wildlife responses to climate change and potentially extend to species with temperature-dependent mating calls.

Summary based on 3 sources


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Sources

Frog love songs and the sounds of climate change

Climate change is making frogs 'sexier', scientists say

BBC Science Focus Magazine • Feb 12, 2026

Climate change is making frogs 'sexier', scientists say

Frog Love Songs And Sounds Of Climate Change

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