Most frogs and toads are excellent jumpers, taking off and landing with a control and grace that rivals elite athletes. Not so for the pumpkin toadlet. These species have become so miniaturized that the structures of their inner ears are too narrow for the fluid flow that helps frogs (and humans!) orient themselves in space. So while the toadlet certainly can jump, it careens through the air drunkenly and lands in any old direction. It’s hard not to laugh at their belly flops, somersaults, and straight-up head-first crashes. Fortunately, being so small, these landings don’t seem to hurt the toadlets, but one imagines they’re unpleasant nevertheless. Left to their own devices, the pumpkin toadlet prefers walking, slowly, like a chameleon; it might be the only way to stay within the limits of its inner ear. (Image credits: top – S. Kikuchi, others – R. Essner, Jr. et al.; research credit: R. Essner, Jr. et al.; via The Atlantic; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)
You’re Drunk, Toadlet



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