homehome Home chatchat Notifications


We haven't been listening to female frog calls because the males just won't shut up

Only 1.4% of frog species have documented female calls — scientists are listening closer now

Tudor Tarita
June 3, 2025 @ 12:36 pm

share Share

As dusk falls over some swamps and ponds, the air fills with frog calls — sharp, steady, and almost always from males. For decades, scientists have focused on these loud, attention-grabbing sounds. But a new study suggests they’ve missed half the conversation. Particularly, the female half.

Published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the review finds that female frog calls have been recorded in just 1.4% of species. That means nearly all we know about frog communication comes from the males.

The researchers say this gap has shaped how we understand mating, behavior, and even the evolution of frogs — and it’s time to listen more closely.

Cause then I'm too messy, and then I'm to croaking clean
Cause then I’m too messy, and then I’m to croaking clean. Image generated using Sora/ChatGPT

Not Just a Gentleman’s Club

For decades, bioacoustics research has been dominated by males — male birdsong, male primate calls, and male frogs’ choruses. That bias was never more evident than in anurans, the group of amphibians that includes frogs and toads.

Males are easy to hear. They sing loudly to attract females, assert territory, and outcompete rivals. But female frogs? Their calls tend to be softer, shorter, and in many cases, they simply get overlooked. But that doesn’t mean they aren’t calling.

The team noted that female calls have been neglected because they are softer and quieter than their male equivalents. These subtler sounds often drown in the chorus of males or are filtered out entirely by human ears and rudimentary recording equipment.

But this review, the most comprehensive of its kind, pieced together data from over 2,900 documents and zeroed in on 112 species across 53 genera. What emerged was a new map of frog communication — one where females are no longer mute.

A Richer Repertoire

Female frog calls are also quite diverse. Researchers classified them into six distinct types: advertisement, courtship, amplexus (mating embrace), release (to signal non-receptiveness), distress, and aggressive calls.

The most common? Distress calls — emitted when captured or threatened. Courtship and release calls were also frequently reported. In one species, the smooth guardian frog of Borneo (Limnonectes palavanensis), females call more frequently than males and even form chorus-like aggregations around calling males.

Perhaps most surprising is the existence of female advertisement calls — signals meant to attract mates. These were long believed to be a male-only trait.

In the American bullfrog (Aquarana catesbeiana), females produce calls similar in tone and structure to the booming male “jug-a-rum.” In another case, the concave-eared torrent frog (Odorrana tormota) emits female vocalizations that are not only frequent and loud, but stretch into ultrasonic ranges — well beyond what the human ear can detect.

Female calls are not inherently simple, however. In some species, females have larger larynxes than males and produce vocalizations that are more elaborate and complex.

Why Does This Matter?

Understanding the full spectrum of frog vocalizations has real implications for science and conservation.

Hyla Arborea singing male
Hyla Arborea singing male. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Frog calls are crucial for species recognition, mate choice, and territory disputes. These behaviors shape reproduction — and survival. In habitats where males vastly outnumber females, understanding how the quieter sex communicates could help conservationists rebalance populations or identify declining species before it’s too late.

It also reshapes ideas about sexual selection. The old paradigm painted males as performers and females as silent choosers. But if females are also calling — sometimes to attract mates, sometimes to compete — then perhaps mate choice goes both ways.

One-third of female vocalizations are linked to mate acquisition processes, the authors noted. This challenges the common perception of females as ‘silent choosers,’ emphasizing their potential competitivity.

Can You Hear Me Now?

If researchers want to listen more closely to female frog calls from now on, it won’t be all that easy.

Part of the problem is technological. Many of the field methods used to record frog calls are tuned for louder, more frequent signals — typically male. The authors urge future fieldwork to take the quieter side of the spectrum seriously. That includes improving recording sensitivity, using directional microphones, and incorporating audio analysis tools capable of distinguishing faint or high-frequency sounds.

It also means changing the way science labels its data. Female calls are often buried in the main text of papers, undocumented in audio databases, or lumped under “male” by default.

To help fix that, the researchers propose a new standardized classification system. “We hope this review motivates researchers to consider female frogs in future behavioural, ecological and evolutionary studies,” they write.

This review joins a growing movement in animal communication research that’s calling for a more balanced look at both sexes. Similar revisions have upended assumptions in birdsong, where female song is now known to be ancestral and widespread. Mammals, reptiles, and even insects are getting similar re-evaluations.

The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, and in the case of frog calls, that absence has been overlooked for over a century.

For now, scientists are left tuning their ears — and their expectations.

share Share

A Hawk in New Jersey Figured Out Traffic Signals and Used Them to Hunt

An urban raptor learns to hunt with help from traffic signals and a mental map.

A Team of Researchers Brought the World’s First Chatbot Back to Life After 60 Years

Long before Siri or ChatGPT, there was ELIZA: a simple yet revolutionary program from the 1960s.

Almost Half of Teens Say They’d Rather Grow Up Without the Internet

Teens are calling for stronger digital protections, not fewer freedoms.

China’s Ancient Star Chart Could Rewrite the History of Astronomy

Did the Chinese create the first star charts?

Ancient British Miners Shipped Tin All the Way to the Pharaohs

Before London even existed, people in Britain were supplying the Mediterranean civilizations.

People Spend $12,000 to Tattoo Their Eyes and Change Their Color but the Risks Are Still Unknown

A new cosmetic trend lets people tattoo their corneas to change eye color.

AI Would Obliterate the Nazi's WWII Enigma Code in Minutes—Here's Why That Matters Today

AI cracked a wartime Enigma code in under 13 minutes.

Climate Change Is Breaking the Insurance Industry

Climate related problems, from storms to health issues, are causing a wave of change in the insurance industry.

Neanderthals Crafted Bone Spears 30,000 Years Before Modern Humans Came In

An 80,000-year-old spear point rewrites what we thought we knew about Neanderthals.

Ancient Chinese Poems Reveal Tragic Decline of Yangtze’s Endangered Porpoise

Researchers used over 700 ancient Chinese poems to trace 1,400 years of ecological change