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Current Herpetology
Abstract
Abstract:
By forced vomiting of stomach contents, we examined the diet of Lithobates catesbeianus inhabiting the city region of Kyoto, central Japan. Among various animal taxa consumed, crustaceans, including Asellota and Oniscoidea in juveniles and introduced American crayfish Procambarus clarkii and native crab Potamon dehaani in adults, occupied the largest proportion in number. In volume, the crayfish and crab also comprised the larger part, and the rest was composed mainly of beetles, bugs, and centipedes. Food habits of L. catesbeianus from Kyoto are characterized by the following points: (1) the frog tends to take a smaller number of larger prey as its body size increases; (2) aquatic prey animals, especially crustaceans, seem to be more important than terrestrial ones; (3) feeding intensity seems to be constant throughout the active seasons, including the breeding season; and (4) vertebrates comprise only very small proportion of the diet, despite their apparent availability, strongly contrasting to previous studies in other localities. Effects of predation on native animals seem to be not very large at present.
We would like to thank Drs. K. Nishikawa and A. Tominaga for their precious advice and help in the fieldwork, and two anonymous reviewers for greatly improving the earlier version of manuscript and T. Johnson for reviewing English text. KD is indebted to the Monbukagakusho for scholarship funding.
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