Limnonectes shompenorum

Limnonectes shompenorum (common name: Shompen frog) is a species of frog in the family Dicroglossidae. It is found in Great Nicobar Island (India), its type locality, and in western Sumatra (Indonesia). It is similar to Limnonectes macrodon.[2] The name refers to Shompen people, the indigenous people of the interior of Great Nicobar Island.[3]

Limnonectes shompenorum

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Dicroglossidae
Genus: Limnonectes
Species:
L. shompenorum
Binomial name
Limnonectes shompenorum
Das, 1996

Description

Limnonectes shompenorum is a relatively large, robust frog. Adult females measure 72–88 mm (2.8–3.5 in) in snout–vent length.[3][4] A male measured 84 mm (3.3 in) in snout–vent length.[4]

Limnonectes shompenorum can be distinguished from its closest relatives by the following suite of characters:[3]

"(1) head narrower than body, and longer than broad; (2) interorbital distance greater than the upper eyelid width; (3) fingers with movable dermal fringe; (4) tips of fingers weakly swollen; (5) finger 4 longer than finger 2; (6) toes completely webbed; (7) dark horizontal loreal stripe; and (8) partially pigmented eggs."

Diet

Limnonectes shompenorum feed on relatively large prey; the stomachs in the type series contained beetles, a cockroach, and a small, unidentified frog.[3]

Habitat and conservation

Limnonectes shompenorum are found in leaf-litter along rivers in tropical forest and forest edges,[1] but also some distance away from rivers.[3] Limnonectes shompenorum is a common species not considered threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), although these frogs are to some extent suffering from habitat loss and pollution from agriculture. They are also harvested for food.[1]

gollark: I'm uploading this kode to hackinate the discord and virtually backtrace your IPs so I can DDOS Visual Basic.
gollark: ```[15] ⍝ LoadSQL 'Xtreme Sample Database 2005' 'Orders' '?' ⍝ fetch all info for table 'Orders'[16] ⍝ LoadSQL 'Northwind' 'Products' ⍝ Fetch the entire Orders table from the NorthWind data source[17] ⍝ LoadSQL 'Northwind' 'Products' ('ProductName' 'UnitPrice') ⍝ Fetch 2 columns[18] ⍝ LoadSQL 'Northwind' 'select first(ProductName), sum(Quantity) from "Order Details" O, Products P where p.ProductID=o.ProductID group by p.ProductID'[19][20] ⎕IO ⎕ML←1 0[21][22] eis←{,(⊂⍣((0≠⊃⍴,⍵)∧1=≡⍵))⍵} ⍝ Enclose if simple and not empty[23][24] (source sql columns)←3↑(eis args),⍬ ⍬ ⍬[25] connected←0[26][27] :If 9≠⎕NC'SQA' ⍝ Bring in local copy of SQAPL if not present[28] ⎕SHADOW'SQA' ⋄ 'SQA'⎕CY'SQAPL'[29] :EndIf[30][31] step←'Initialize SQAPL'[32] →(0<1⊃r←SQA.Init'')⍴ERROR[33][34] step←'Make Connection'[35][36] :If (⊂source)∊conn←⊃¨2 2⊃SQA.Tree'.' ⍝ Already connected[37] conn←source[38] :Else[39] source←eis source[40] conn←1⊃((⊂'LoadSQL'),¨⍕¨⍳1+⍴conn)~conn[41] →(0<1⊃r←SQA.Connect(⊂conn),source)⍴ERROR[42] connected←1 ⍝ Since we made a connection, remember to close[43] :EndIf```
gollark: You may laugh now...
gollark: The NSA.
gollark: Well if you know who it is then what are you now trying to do?

References

  1. Iskandar, D.; Mumpuni, Das, I. & Vijayakumar, S.P. (2004). "Limnonectes shompenorum". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004: e.T58366A11772127. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T58366A11772127.en.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. Frost, Darrel R. (2014). "Limnonectes shompenorum Das, 1996". Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  3. Das, I. (1996). "Limnonectes shompenorum, a new species of ranid frog of the Rana macrodon complex from Great Nicobar, India" (PDF). Journal of South Asian Natural History. 2: 127–134. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-14. Retrieved 2014-04-13.
  4. Inger, R. F.; Iskandar, D. T. (2005). "A collection of amphibians from West Sumatra, with description of a new species of Megophrys (Amphibia: Anura)" (PDF). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 53: 133–142. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-14. Retrieved 2014-04-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.