FrogMAP — Frog Atlas of Southern Africa

Family Pyxicephalidae

Cacosternum boettgeri

Boettger’s Caco, Boettger’s Dainty Frog, Common Caco, Gewone Blikslanertjie (A)

By E. Scott

Species account was published under the name:
          Cacosternum boettgeri (Boulenger, 1882)
Red listing status: Least Concern (2013)



Photo by Brouard Jean-Paul; Luke Durkan, 2011. URL: FrogMAP: 696

Distribution

C. boettgeri is one of the most widespread and abundant frog species in the atlas region, occurring in most suitable habitat throughout its range at both high and low elevations. The species is absent from Namaqualand, the highlands of Lesotho, the top of the Soutpansberg and along much of the Mpumalanga escarpment.

The lack of records from southeastern KwaZulu-Natal, the Buffalo River and the Lower Tugela River basin, may reflect genuine absence of this species (Lambiris 1989a). Conversely, the paucity of records from the arid Northern Cape Province and parts of Eastern Cape Province, are probably the result of inadequate sampling effort.

The range of C. boettgeri may have increased in the last century due to human activity, particularly where bush and reeds have been cleared and grass has been introduced (Van Dijk 1971b) along with domestic stock.

Outside of the atlas region, C. boettgeri occurs in the savanna regions of Namibia, eastern Botswana, southern Zambia and the Zimbabwe plateau. The disjunct populations that occur in the grasslands of northern Tanzania, southern Kenya and Ethiopia, previously referred to C. boettgeri (Poynton 1964; Poynton and Broadley 1985b), differ in advertisement call and skeletal and genetic characteristics, and apparently represent an undescribed taxon (E. Scott in prep.).

Similarly, the populations in the winter-rainfall Western Cape, recently referred to C. platys (Channing 2001) but previously synonymised with C. boettgeri (Poynton 1964), display different advertisement calls, in addition to a marked mtDNA sequence divergence, compared to their savanna counterparts (E. Scott in prep.). However, the limits of distribution of the Western Cape form are currently unknown, since it is almost impossible to separate preserved museum material on external morphology alone. The atlas distribution map presented here does not distinguish between C. boettgeri and C. platys because over most of the atlas period, their seperate taxonomic status was not recognised. Reliable diagnostic field characters have not been described.

Habitat

C. boettgeri inhabits a wide variety of vegetation types in the Nama Karoo, Succulent Karoo, Savanna, Grassland, Fynbos and Thicket biomes, but is usually absent from forest, although it is sometimes found in forest clearings. Within these biomes, it favours open areas with short vegetation and is especially abundant in grassy areas. This species can tolerate drier habitats than C. nanum, but also occurs in high rainfall areas (Van Dijk 1977). In the Kalahari, C. boettgeri occurs naturally only in pans or along river courses, but can also be found in artificially created water bodies. The species breeds in almost any small, temporary water body, such as pools in inundated grasslands, culverts and other rain-filled depressions.

Life history

During the dry season, C. boettgeri aestivates in mudbanks, mudcracks, burrows of other animals, disused termitaria and under stones.

This species appears to have an extended breeding season. During the rainy season, males usually start calling in the late afternoon and call incessantly after dark, continuing until around midnight. Large choruses are common.

Call bouts are usually initiated by the same individual in the group (Channing 2001). Males normally call from concealed positions under vegetation or other cover, at water level, but have also been observed calling from totally exposed positions. A short territorial call is sometimes uttered by individual males prior to their regular advertisement call. In addition to the advertisement and territorial calls, several other vocalizations are known from the males of C. boettgeri, but their function is not well understood.

Clutches of c.250 eggs are attached to vegetation below the surface of the water (Channing 2001). The tadpoles usually hatch two days later, and metamorphosis is completed within approximately two weeks (Pienaar et al. 1976; Wager 1986).

C. boettgeri is known to feed on termites (Passmore and Carruthers 1995) but probably takes any small insect. In common with its congeners, it is probably a major predator of mosquitoes (Wager 1986). The Yellow-billed Egret Egretta intermedia, Spotted Skaapsteker Psammophylax rhombeatus (Channing 2001) and Giant Bullfrog Pyxicephalus adspersus (W.R. Branch pers. comm.) are known to prey on this frog.

Conservation

C. boettgeri is known from various nature reserves and protected areas throughout its range and is not threatened. The species is a supreme generalist, adapting well to disturbance. It appears to be unaffected by moderate eutrophication of its water by organic pollution such as bovine (or other) excrement and fertilizers. No conservation actions are necessary for this species.

Current distribution map



Undated records;  pre-1996;  1996 to 2002;  2003 to present

Citation:

  • Web:
    FrogMAP. 2024. Cacosternum boettgeri (Boulenger, 1882). Animal Demography Unit. Accessed from http://frogmap.adu.org.za/?sp=400; on 2024-03-28 02:03:08.
  • Book:
    Minter L.R., Burger M., Harrison J.A., Braack H.H., Bishop P.J. & Kloepfer D. (eds). 2004. Atlas and Red Data book of the frogs of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. SI/MAB Series no. 9. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Published by the Smithsonian Institution and the Avian Demography Unit (now Animal Demography Unit).

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The Biodiversity and Development Institute (BDI)
and
The FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
Department of Biological Sciences - University of Cape Town
 
This work, except photographs, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Copyright of images uploaded into the Virtual Museum remains with the photographers.

The Biodiversity and Development Institute (BDI)          The Biodiversity and Development Institute (BDI)          The FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology          UCT