Anodonthyla jeanbai

Anodonthyla jeanbai is an arboreal species of frogs in the family Microhylidae.[2] It is highly polychromatic, and has an extremely isolated phylogenetic position, showing no clear relationships to any other members of the genus Anodonthyla. It is found only in a small higher-elevation area in Madagascar.

Anodonthyla jeanbai
Anodonthyla jeanbai from Andohahela National Park
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Microhylidae
Subfamily: Cophylinae
Genus: Anodonthyla
Species:
A. jeanbai
Binomial name
Anodonthyla jeanbai
Vences, Glaw, Köhler, and Wollenberg, 2010

Description

Specimen in life, in dorsolateral and ventral views, all from Andohahela National Park. (A) Holotype specimen ZSM 88/2005; (B-F) paratype specimens, all preserved in the UADBA collection.

A. jeanbai can be distinguished from all other Anodonthyla species in numerous ways, including the presence of a yellowish colouration located on the ventral surfaces, which in some specimens, completely extends over the venter. Another distinction is the tympanum, which is often not as clearly visible as with other species.[2]

This species has a dorsum and posterior part of head that is nearly uniformly brown in colour. The anterior head is a somewhat lighter shade of brown. There is a narrow middorsal line running from the tip of the snout to the cloaca. The inguinal region contains two black spots. The tympanic region is light in colour, and has a dark supratympanic fold at the border. There are no distinct, dark crossbands on the forelimbs, however, on the hindlegs these bands are present. The cloacal region has a blackish colour, while the chest, ventral parts of the limbs, and throat are a dirty yellowish colour. The belly of this species has a similar colour, however it is more grayish.[2]

A. jeanbai is an extremely polychromatic species. In life, the dorsum is light brown. The dorsal surfaces of both the arms and legs are a light reddish-brown colour, all having some indistinct irregular-shaped darker markings.[2]

Many specimens have a somewhat regular dark 'hourglass' pattern located on the scapular region, and may also have small reddish-brown tubercles in a scattered pattern on the dorsum.[2]

Distribution

Views of palmar surfaces of male specimen, showing detail of first finger and prepollex.

The species has been found only at a single surveyed site at a relatively high elevation in the Andohahela National Park, which is located at the southern end of Madagascar, in the province of Toliara.[2]

Habitat

This species can be found at higher elevations, in forests with a high bamboo density. They are seen at night, typically 1 to 2 metres high on bamboo trunks.[2]

Phylogeny

In terms of phylogeny, this species is very isolated. I has no clear relationships to any other member of the genus Anodonthyla. It has a genetic 16S divergence of 9.4-12.1% relative to other species.[2]

Etymology

This species is named for the Malagasy herpetologist Jean Baptiste (Jean-Ba) Ramanamanjato. He provided the logistic information that was a crucial part of the expedition to the type locality, an area of the Andohahela National Park, located at higher elevations.[2]

gollark: If you want C4, you can always join his entirely inactive server.
gollark: It would be easy to make such a thing, but then much more annoying to make it updateable because then I would have to actually write backend code.
gollark: ```html<div style="text-align:center">0</div>```
gollark: You said "a 3090 running ETH makes 12$ a day" earlier.
gollark: Mining doesn't involve manual work beyond setting it up.

See also

  • Amphibians of Madagascar

References

  1. IUCN (2016). "Anodonthyla jeanbai". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016. Retrieved 26 November 2016.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  2. "Contributions to Zoology". Dpc.uba.uva.nl. 27 January 2005. Retrieved 8 October 2011.

Further reading

  • Glaw F. and Vences M., Amphibians and Reptiles of Madagascar 3rd edition, M. Vences and F. Glaw Verlags GbR., 2007
  • Vences M., Glaw F., Köhler J. & Wollenberg K.C. 2010 Molecular phylogeny, morphology and bioacoustics reveal five additional species of arboreal microhylid frogs of the genus Anodonthyla from Madagascar. Contributions to Zoology, 79: 1-32. pdf
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.