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Parental transport induces a dormant state while maintaining oxytocin recruitment in poison frog tadpoles

Created on 23 Jun 2026

Authors

Antunes, D. F., Liu, Z., Ringler, E.

Abstract

Parental care can have pervasive effects on offspring neurodevelopment. Parent-offspring interactions are often modulated by the neuropeptide oxytocin, which is responsible for the development of social bonds. The development of the oxytocinergic system is dependent on the quality of parental care during the post-natal phase. However, it is yet unknown how post-natal direct interactions can influence the development of the oxytocinergic pathway. Here we tested how an obligate parental care behaviour, tadpole transport in poison frogs, influences the development of the oxytocinergic pathway. To this end, we quantified whole brain expression of oxytocin receptor and oxytocin precursor throughout three developmental stages of A. femoralis tadpoles, before, during and after tadpole transport. Our results show an overall downregulation during tadpole transport, which indicates that during transport tadpoles enter a dormant state to slow down development until they are placed in water. Interestingly, the expression of oxytocin precursor did not vary between the three developmental stages. This might indicate that oxytocin is being recruited during transport, but does not lead to neurodevelopmental changes. In sum, here we present the first evidence of a dormant state during tadpole transport which might be an adaptive response to the terrestrial reproduction in poison frogs.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 23 Jun 2026.

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