Copiula
Copiula is a genus of microhylid frogs endemic to New Guinea. The common name Mehely frogs has been coined for them.[1] They are leaf-litter inhabitants.[2]
Copiula | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Amphibia |
Order: | Anura |
Family: | Microhylidae |
Subfamily: | Asterophryinae |
Genus: | Copiula Méhelÿ, 1901 |
Type species | |
Phrynixalus oxyrhinus Boulenger, 1898 | |
Species | |
14 species (see text) |
Taxonomy
Copiula is probably not monophyletic. Some former Austrochaperina species have already been transferred to this genus, and further ones might follow when more data became available.[1][3]
Species
There are at present 14 species in this genus:[1]
- Copiula alpestris (Zweifel, 2000)
- Copiula annanoreenae Günther, Richards, and Dahl, 2014
- Copiula derongo (Zweifel, 2000)
- Copiula exspectata Günther, 2002
- Copiula fistulans Menzies and Tyler, 1977 — Lae Mehely Frog
- Copiula guttata (Zweifel, 2000)
- Copiula lennarti Günther, Richards, and Dahl, 2014
- Copiula major Günther, 2002
- Copiula minor Menzies and Tyler, 1977 — Milne Bay Mehely Frog
- Copiula obsti Günther, 2002
- Copiula oxyrhina (Boulenger, 1898) — Misima Island Mehely Frog
- Copiula pipiens Burton and Stocks, 1986 — Wirui Mehely Frog
- Copiula rivularis (Zweifel, 2000)
- Copiula tyleri Burton, 1990 — Sepik Mehely Frog
The AmphibiaWeb[4] reports fewer species, with species that Peloso and colleagues moved in 2016 from Austrochaperina and Oxydactyla missing.[3]
gollark: PRs welcome!
gollark: I was very lazy and bees bees apioids cached_message.
gollark: It won't fetch messages arbitrarily far back.
gollark: Over here I believe they often do group theory.
gollark: I'll inform them.
References
- Frost, Darrel R. (2016). "Copiula Méhely, 1901". Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
- Zweifel, R. G. (2000). "Partition of the Australopapuan microhylid frog genus Sphenophryne with descriptions of new species". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 253: 1–130.
- Peloso, Pedro L.V.; Frost, Darrel R.; Richards, Stephen J.; Rodrigues, Miguel T.; Donnellan, Stephen; Matsui, Masafumi; Raxworthy, Cristopher J.; Biju, S.D.; Lemmon, Emily Moriarty; Lemmon, Alan R.; Wheeler, Ward C. (2016). "The impact of anchored phylogenomics and taxon sampling on phylogenetic inference in narrow-mouthed frogs (Anura, Microhylidae)". Cladistics. 32 (2): 113–140. doi:10.1111/cla.12118.
- "Microhylidae". AmphibiaWeb: Information on amphibian biology and conservation. [web application]. Berkeley, California: AmphibiaWeb. 2016. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.