“…Furthermore, they often show low vagility and are highly philopatric to their natal ponds (Cayuela et al, 2020), which facilitates the estimation of their potential exposure to radiation and makes them ideal subjects for evaluating the effects of radioactive contamination on wild vertebrates. However, work on amphibians in radio‐contaminated environments is still scarce (Orizaola, 2022). Recent studies have reported, for example, that radiation exposure was linked to an increase in mutation rates and mitochondrial DNA damage in frogs from radio‐contaminated areas (Car et al, 2022; Gombeau et al, 2020), but a lack of effects of radiation exposure on physiological biomarkers in Chornobyl tree frogs (Burraco, Bonzom, et al, 2021).…”