Transparent care

Ingo Arndt's Image

A beam of sunlight shines down through a leaf and the translucent skin of a tiny reticulated glass frog clinging to its underside.

The male is guarding a clutch of maturing eggs, stuck to each other and to the leaf with jelly. It will guard them for two weeks until the tadpoles hatch and drop into the stream below. Males will wrestle other males in defence of their patches and in their attempts to attract females to their spawning leaves. They will also fend off predatory wasps intent on taking the eggs. The behaviour and transparency of glass frogs have always fascinated Ingo, so he travelled to Costa Rica in search of them. Transparency is the perfect camouflage, but Ingo managed to find a number of brooding males clinging to leaves beside a small stream in the Piedras Blancas National Park. Some were guarding several clutches of eggs. With the aid of a ladder, he got his shots.


Behind the lens

Ingo Arndt

Ingo Arndt

Germany

Since childhood, Ingo has spent all his free time outdoors, and after finishing school became a professional wildlife photographer. His work has been published in magazines such as GEO and National Geographic, and he’s received numerous awards, including from Wildlife Photographer of the Year, GDT and World Press Photo. After working mainly for the editorial market for 35 years, Ingo’s now producing photo series for the art market. He’s published 20 books, with several being translated into multiple languages.

Image details

  • Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
  • 100mm f2.8 lens
  • 1/45 sec at f11  •   ISO 250
  • Piedras Blancas National Park, Costa Rica
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