Strawberry poison frogs, also known as “blue jeans frogs,” are smaller than a quarter, with bright red bodies and navy-blue limbs. They inhabit shady Costa Rican forests, but fewer of them live there since humans began cutting their forest habitat to create farmland. Sunny fields and pastures are hotter and drier than the forests, so scientists wanted to know how strawberry frogs were adapting to their new environment.
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