This frog is the world’s smallest known vertebrate
The tiniest adult was just 6.5 millimeters (under 3/10 of an inch) long
A Brazilian flea toad’s head is too tiny to bear its many crowns.
The critter (Brachycephalus pulex) is neither a flea nor a toad. Instead, it’s a wee frog with two big new titles. It’s just been named the world’s smallest known amphibian and the smallest known vertebrate.
From snout to rump, one adult measured just under 6.5 millimeters. That’s about a quarter of an inch. It’s small enough to sit comfortably on a pinkie fingernail. And it sneaks under the previous record by about half a millimeter.
A team reported this mini male February 7 in Zoologica Scripta.
Mirco Solé is a herpetologist at the Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz in Ilhéus, Brazil. He’s part of a team that studied 46 adult Brazilian flea toads — 24 males and 22 females. On average, males measure about 7 millimeters (0.27 inch) long. Females measure about 8 millimeters (0.31 inch). Before, the smallest known vertebrate was the Paedophryne amanuensis frog from Papua New Guinea. Males of that species average about 8 millimeters (0.31 inch) long.
Do you have a science question? We can help!
Submit your question here, and we might answer it an upcoming issue of Science News Explores
Frogs this teeny have some big changes to their bodies compared with larger species. For instance, the foot of a Brazilian flea toad has just two toes. Most frog feet have five, Solé notes. And some other small Brachycephalus frogs have oddly shaped inner ear tubes. That feature makes them clumsy jumpers. Brazilian flea toad ears haven’t been tested, Solé says. But, he notes, these animals do seem to be decent hoppers.
There are likely even tinier vertebrates not yet discovered, Solé says. After all, Earth has lots of unexplored nooks and crannies. If found, such creatures might reveal new biology related to body size.
Anything smaller than about six millimeters long “would really challenge morphology and physics,” he says. “But who knows.”
Educators and Parents, Sign Up for The Cheat Sheet
Weekly updates to help you use Science News Explores in the learning environment
Thank you for signing up!
There was a problem signing you up.