Temperature and Development Drive Variation in Oral Morphology among Tailed Frog (Ascaphus spp.) Populations
Morphological variation is often maintained by complex and interrelated factors, complicating the identification of underlying drivers. Tadpole oral morphology is one such trait that may be driven by the independent and interacting effects of the environment and variation in developmental processes. Although many studies have investigated tadpole oral morphological diversity among species, few have sought to understand the drivers that underlie intraspecific variation. In this study, we investigated potential drivers of labial tooth number variation among populations of two species of tailed frogs, the Rocky Mountain Tailed Frog (Ascaphus montanus) and the Coastal Tailed Frog (A. truei). We counted labial teeth from 240 tadpoles collected across elevation (both species) and latitudinal (A. truei) gradients, providing a natural temperature gradient. We tested the effects of developmental stage and local temperature conditions on labial tooth number. We found that labial tooth number variation was independently affected by both developmental stage and local temperature, as well as the interacting effects of these two variables (pseudo-R2 = 67–77%). Our results also uncovered consistent patterns in labial tooth row formula across the ranges of both species; however, tadpoles of A. truei from northern British Columbia had a unique bifurcation of a posterior tooth row. This study highlights the diversity in intraspecific tadpole oral morphology and the interacting processes that drive it.

Pinned specimen of Ascaphus montanus (specimen ID WCF08228 from Lost Horse Creek, MT) showing labeled oral morphology, including labial tooth rows. Rows are numbered from anterior to posterior. The A2, A3, and P1 rows are biserial (i.e., have two rows of teeth), as demonstrated by the labeled P1 row. The labial tooth row formula (see Methods) for this specimen is 3/9(1), where (1) indicates the medial gap in the P1 row.

Sampling locations for Ascaphus truei (left) and Ascaphus montanus (right). Inset maps show estimated range boundaries for A. truei (in green) and A. montanus (in blue). Range maps from NatureServe & IUCN (2012).

Ascaphus truei tadpoles had higher overall counts of labial teeth in the P2 row than A. montanus tadpoles. Within both species, populations (here shown as different colored boxplots) varied in their P2 tooth counts.

From the results of the species-specific GLMs, we predicted relationships (shown with 1.96*SE confidence intervals) between P2 tooth counts and developmental stage at each temperature point sampled (annual average stream temperature). Raw data points are also shown on these plots.
Contributor Notes
Associate Editor: D. S. Siegel.