Anurans are known to feign death as a way to avoid or minimize the risk of predation. However, information on this defensive strategy is scattered and we believe that there is more than one behaviour type referred to as thanatosis. Here we review the literature, add original data, and propose definitions and new names that complement the present knowledge on the subject. We collected information on 334 individuals of 99 species in 16 families and grouped the recorded displays into two categories of tonic immobility: (1) thanatosis, death-feigning, or playing possum, and (2) shrinking or contracting. These two categories are treated as different behaviour types because of the display pattern (position of fore- and hindlimbs, eye opening), pr...
Deimatic displays, where sudden changes in prey appearance elicit aversive predator reactions, have ...
The assumption that the colours of the green poison frog, Dendrobates auratus, serve as a warning of...
Amphibian declines have been a major focus of the scientific community for nearly three decades. Man...
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do...
Tonic immobility (TI), otherwise known as thanatosis or death-feigning, is a response in which an an...
Thanatosis—also known as death-feigning and, we argue more appropriately, tonic immobility (TI)—is a...
Death feigning, a variant of tonic immobility, is usually interpreted as a last-resort antipredator ...
<div><p>ABSTRACT Death-feigning behaviour occurs when the animal simulates a state of immobility. Th...
Adaptations to captivity that reduce fitness are one of many reasons, which explain the low success ...
Death feigning, sometimes designated as thanatosis, reflex immobilization, tonic immobility or fakin...
Adaptations to captivity that reduce fitness are one of many reasons, which explain the low success ...
Evolutionary thanatology benefits from broad taxonomic comparisons of non-human animals’ responses t...
Adaptations to captivity that reduce fitness are one of many reasons, which explain the low success ...
Thanatosis (pretending to be dead), sometimes called letisimulation, is widely used as an anti-preda...
A crucial step in any ethological study is to distinguish and classify the observed behavior into ca...
Deimatic displays, where sudden changes in prey appearance elicit aversive predator reactions, have ...
The assumption that the colours of the green poison frog, Dendrobates auratus, serve as a warning of...
Amphibian declines have been a major focus of the scientific community for nearly three decades. Man...
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do...
Tonic immobility (TI), otherwise known as thanatosis or death-feigning, is a response in which an an...
Thanatosis—also known as death-feigning and, we argue more appropriately, tonic immobility (TI)—is a...
Death feigning, a variant of tonic immobility, is usually interpreted as a last-resort antipredator ...
<div><p>ABSTRACT Death-feigning behaviour occurs when the animal simulates a state of immobility. Th...
Adaptations to captivity that reduce fitness are one of many reasons, which explain the low success ...
Death feigning, sometimes designated as thanatosis, reflex immobilization, tonic immobility or fakin...
Adaptations to captivity that reduce fitness are one of many reasons, which explain the low success ...
Evolutionary thanatology benefits from broad taxonomic comparisons of non-human animals’ responses t...
Adaptations to captivity that reduce fitness are one of many reasons, which explain the low success ...
Thanatosis (pretending to be dead), sometimes called letisimulation, is widely used as an anti-preda...
A crucial step in any ethological study is to distinguish and classify the observed behavior into ca...
Deimatic displays, where sudden changes in prey appearance elicit aversive predator reactions, have ...
The assumption that the colours of the green poison frog, Dendrobates auratus, serve as a warning of...
Amphibian declines have been a major focus of the scientific community for nearly three decades. Man...