About Andinobates bombetes (Myers & Daly, 1980)
Adult male Andinobates bombetes, commonly called the cauca poison frog, measure approximately 17.76 mm in snout-vent length, while adult females measure approximately 18.63 mm. The base color of the dorsal skin is black or dark brown, with red or orange markings extending from the nose to the middle of the body, and sometimes all the way to the end of the body. In at least one recorded case, these stripes extend onto the front legs. There is an additional red or orange blotch on the head. The sides of the body are black, even when the rest of the back is brown, and bear yellow or yellow-green spots. The front legs may be red or orange, and are always the same color as the stripes on the back. The upper lip may match the color of the dorsal stripes, or be pale green mixed with some red. The dorsal surfaces of all four feet may have blue, green, or yellow coloring. The toes of all four feet are light brown or gray, and the ventral surfaces of the feet are dark gray. The ventral surfaces of the forelegs are black with lighter markings. The ventral surfaces of the head and trunk may be black with green, yellow, or blue-green markings. The tongue and inside of the mouth are dark gray. The iris is such a dark brown that the pupil is difficult to distinguish. Compared to other previously studied poison frogs, the cauca poison frog has limited homing ability. Its natural habitats are montane and submontane cloud forests, located between 850 and 2300 meters above sea level. It relies on microhabitats provided by bromeliad plants, which hold pools of water in their leaves and near their leaf axils. This frog can tolerate disturbed habitats as long as these bromeliad plants are present there. Females lay eggs in leaf litter. Males have been observed visiting egg clutches and carrying tadpoles on their backs. After hatching, tadpoles swim in the water held by bromeliad plants. Tadpoles are gray-brown, part of the tail is transparent, and they have large beaks.