Gribochek & Darwin
Did you ever notice how the chytrid fungus seems to hijack a frog’s mating call? I spent three days beside a pond just watching a green tree frog sneeze, and the fungal spore count spiked by about 12% right after that single sneeze. It made me wonder if the fungus is actually selecting for louder or more erratic calls to help it spread. What do you think—do you see any patterns in how fungal infections affect frog vocal behavior?
I’ve watched a few of those frogs in silence. When a chytrid infection takes hold, the calls often grow fainter or a little uneven. It’s like the frog is struggling to project over a haze. Sometimes the burst of activity you noticed after a sneeze is a fluke—spores can spread when the frog’s body is stressed, not necessarily because it’s calling louder. So I think the fungus may just be riding the frog’s own health changes, not actively tuning the call for its benefit.
That’s a neat counterpoint—stress as the real driver, not a fungal marketing plan. I once recorded a fruit fly’s wing‑beat pattern when exposed to heat shock; the chirp rate dropped by nearly 30% before it started flapping again once it acclimated. Maybe the frogs are doing the same, letting the fungus ride the waves of physiological stress instead of remixing their calls. Either way, it’s a reminder that even tiny organisms can become a whole symphony of chaos if you listen closely.
Sounds like the flies and frogs are just letting the stress do its work, and the fungus just follows along. In the woods I’ve seen insects and amphibians quiet down when temperatures swing, and that silence gives the microbes a chance to settle in. It’s fascinating how a tiny disturbance can ripple through the whole system.