
<rss version="0.91">
    <channel>
        <title>Latest Articles from Vertebrate Zoology</title>
        <description>Latest 31 Articles from Vertebrate Zoology</description>
        <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 08:59:39 +0000</lastBuildDate>
        <generator>Pensoft FeedCreator</generator>
        <image>
            <url>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/i/logo.jpg</url>
            <title>Latest Articles from Vertebrate Zoology</title>
            <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Feed provided by https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/. Click to visit.]]></description>
        </image>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Possible origins, mountainous microendemism and elevational range distribution in Stumpffia frogs (Microhylidae: Cophylinae) on Montagne d’Ambre in North Madagascar</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/166419/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 76: 51-72</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.76.e166419</p>
					<p>Authors: N. Joris Fleck, Alice Petzold, Andolalao Rakotoarison, Miguel Vences, Mark D. Scherz</p>
					<p>Abstract: The role of regional diversification versus the effect of migration in generating local species assemblages remains poorly known. Here, we contribute to the understanding of the role of colonisation and in situ diversification by studying an assemblage of miniaturised microhylid frogs of the genus Stumpffia Boettger, 1881, of which six species have been known to occur on Montagne d’Ambre, a volcanic mountain in the north of Madagascar. These six species are distributed over different, partly overlapping elevational levels. We examined this assemblage based on molecular data (16S mtDNA and Rag1 nDNA), new data on the elevational distribution among local Stumpffia species, and differences in advertisement calls. Our results revealed several genetic lineages constituting distinct species, including another species record for the mountain, S. mamitika Rakotoarison et al., 2017, as well as the new candidate species Stumpffia sp. aff. angeluci. This brings the total number of described species known to occur on the mountain to seven, four of which are micro-endemic. Our data indicate that one clade, consisting of four species, has arisen in situ as a microendemic radiation. We discuss alternative evolutionary scenarios for the biogeographic origin of the observed Stumpffia species.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/166419/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/166419/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/166419/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 21 Jan 2026 14:39:26 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Revision of bush frogs, Raorchestes and Philautus (Amphibia: Anura: Rhacophoridae) from the northeast Indian biodiversity hotspot with description of thirteen new species</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/148133/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 75: 517-625</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e148133</p>
					<p>Authors: Bitupan Boruah, V. Deepak, Abhijit Das</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          Bush frogs currently in the genera Raorchestes and Philautus are poorly documented from northeast India when compared to the Western Ghats of southwestern India. They are morphologically cryptic, but variable in their acoustic repertoire and genetic divergence. We present a long-overdue revision of the bush frogs of northeast India by sampling 81 localities in eight Indian States (including nine type localities of known species) and by comparing historical (especially, type) material. Using an integrative approach that combines levels of divergence in mitochondrial DNA, a nuclear-encoded gene and comparing morphological and bioacoustic data, we demonstrate the existence of 13 new species, which are formally described here. In addition, based on the evidence from molecular and morphological data we synonymise four previously described species from this region. We resolve the taxonomic identities of three other frog species found in northeast India. After extensive survey across northeast India, we did not find a single specimen of the genus Philautus. The only species in this genus with ambiguous generic identity is P. dubius which requires further taxonomic investigation.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/148133/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/148133/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/148133/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Review Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2025 09:59:54 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Museomics and integrative taxonomy reveal three new species of glandular viviparous tree toads (Nectophrynoides) in Tanzania’s Eastern Arc Mountains (Anura: Bufonidae)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/167008/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 75: 459-485</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e167008</p>
					<p>Authors: Christian Thrane, John V. Lyakurwa, H. Christoph Liedtke, Michele Menegon, Alice Petzold, Simon P. Loader, Mark D. Scherz</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          For the last century, herpetologists have referred to any Nectophrynoides Noble, 1926 toad characterized by a large, robust body, with large, distinct parotoid glands, as Nectophrynoides viviparus (Tornier, 1905). Consequently, Nectophrynoides viviparus is also considered to have the broadest distribution of all its congeners, with populations ranging from the Tanzanian Southern Highlands, close to the Tanzania-Malawi border, through the Udzungwa and Mahenge Mountains in the south to Uluguru, Rubeho, and Nguru Mountains in the central part of the Eastern Arc Mountains. However, there is underappreciated morphological diversity within what is generally referred to as N. viviparus, and various populations are isolated by large distances and geographical barriers. Recent molecular studies have shown that N. viviparus from the Southern Highlands, the type locality, is genetically distinct from all other N. viviparus populations in the Eastern Arc Mountains, suggesting the existence of a species complex warranting taxonomic revision. Here, we present an integrative taxonomic assessment of southern populations by supplementing the genetic results with the analysis of morphometric and morphological data for 257 specimens assigned to N. viviparus, including museomic data for name-bearing types. Based on the results, we describe three new species from the N. viviparus species complex, covering the southern Eastern Arc Mountains populations. Together with a revised morphological key to the genus and a gazetteer of known populations, we provide Extent of Occurrence and Area of Occupancy for N. viviparus sensu stricto and the new species to investigate their conservation status compared to other members of the genus.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/167008/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/167008/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/167008/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 6 Nov 2025 13:59:45 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Unearthing the names of burrowing frogs: The taxonomic status of the Chacoan populations of Leptodactylus fuscus (Schneider, 1799) (Anura: Leptodactylidae)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/159878/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 75: 325-352</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e159878</p>
					<p>Authors: Francisco Brusquetti, Diego Bueno-Villafañe, Andrea Caballero-Gini, Paulo D. P. Pinheiro, Flavia Netto, Freddy Burgos-Gallardo, Danilo Fernández Ríos, Edgar Bernabé Cardozo, Diego Baldo</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          The widely distributed Neotropical frog Leptodactylus fuscus has long been suspected to represent a species complex. Among its numerous synonyms is Leptodactylus gualambensis Gallardo, 1964, described based on specimens from the western South American Gran Chaco and regarded as a typical Chacoan species. This species was synonymized 40 years ago and has not been reassessed since. In this study, we evaluate the taxonomic validity of the Chacoan populations of L. fuscus potentially assignable to L. gualambensis, based on molecular phylogenetic analyses, lineage delimitation, bioacoustics, and morphology using extensive sampling from the South American Gran Chaco and adjacent regions. Our phylogenetic analyses revealed three clades: One distributed across northern South America and Central America, including topotypes of L. fuscus; a second primarily occurring in the South American Gran Chaco, including topotypes of L. gualambensis; and a third found in parts of Paraguay, Argentina, and Brazil. This structure is corroborated by lineage delimitation analysis, genetic differentiation, gene flow estimations, and by differences in advertisement call duration and frequency, as well as head and limb proportions. Based on these results, we support the revalidation of L. gualambensis, redefine the geographic distribution of L. fuscus sensu stricto, and discuss the status of other available synonyms. In addition, we discuss variation in certain morphological traits of L. gualambensis that may be associated with its broad geographic distribution, which encompasses both dry, highly seasonal environments and humid, relatively homogeneous habitats.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/159878/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/159878/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/159878/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 17 Oct 2025 11:49:49 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Morphological diversity of tadpoles of fork-tongued frogs (Anura: Dicroglossidae) with different trophic specializations</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/139103/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 75: 31-57</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e139103</p>
					<p>Authors: Anna B. Vassilieva, Trung Duc Nguyen, Pavel A. Sorokin</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          Dicroglossid tadpoles are an important element of pond and stream communities in Southeast Asia. They are often found in syntopy but belong to different trophic guilds, from generalized detritophages to specialized predators. In the present research, the external and internal larval morphologies of seven anuran species of the family Dicroglossidae distributed in Vietnam (Fejervarya limnocharis, Fejervarya moodiei, Hoplobatrachus rugulosus, Limnonectes dabanus, Occidozyga lima, Occidozyga martensii, and Quasipaa verrucospinosa) are described and compared. An integrated approach is followed in the study by describing external and mouthparts morphologies, gross structure of the digestive tract, and the structure of chondrocranium and hyobranchium, which revealed the main trophic adaptations of tadpoles. Different trends in the evolution of larval macrophagy in Dicroglossidae led to the formation of fundamentally different larval forms. In the first case, the tadpoles are opportunistic predators that retain the ability to use a wide range of food resources (Hoplobatrachus); they have extremely specialized mouthparts but moderately transformed digestive tract and larval skeleton. In the other case, tadpoles are highly specialized obligate carnivores (Occidozyga) that have completely lost omnivory, with a radically transformed digestive tract, chondrocranium and hyobranchium. A comparison with generalized tadpoles revealed that in dicroglossids, the transformations of the larval skeleton due to carnivory mainly affect the labial cartilages and the palatoquadrate cartilage, as well as the hyobranchium. These transformations are common to macrophagous tadpoles of different taxonomic groups and result in greater larval morphological diversity.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/139103/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/139103/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/139103/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 5 Feb 2025 14:31:46 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Historical biogeography and systematics of yellow-bellied toads (Bombina variegata), with the description of a new subspecies from the Balkans</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/138687/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 75: 1-30</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e138687</p>
					<p>Authors: Christophe Dufresnes, Simeon Lukanov, Sven Gippner, Johanna Ambu, Ilias Strachinis, Dragan Arsovski, Benjamin Monod-Broca, Hugo Cayuela, Petros Lymberakis, Daniele Canestrelli, Dan Cogălniceanu, Nikolay A. Poyarkov, Spartak N. Litvinchuk, Tomasz Suchan, Mathieu Denoël, Daniel Jablonski</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          The Balkan Peninsula hosts a great proportion of Europe’s biodiversity, and this is well illustrated by amphibian richness and endemism. Among them, the yellow-bellied toad Bombina variegata has been a model in ecology and evolution, but several aspects of its phylogeography and taxonomy remain surprisingly poorly understood. In this study, we combine cytochrome b DNA barcoding data (1238 individuals from 355 localities), mitogenome phylogenetics (17.2 kb), gene-based nuclear phylogenetics (3.7 kb from four gene fragments) and multilocus phylogenomics (4759 loci / ~554 kb obtained by double digest Restriction Associated DNA sequencing; ddRAD-seq) to re-assess the diversification of B. variegata, and revisit its nomenclatural history to assign scientific names to phylogeographic lineages. The analyses support four major lineages, one assigned to B. v. variegata (Carpathians and northwestern ranges), one assigned to B. v. pachypus (Apennine Peninsula), and two assigned to B. v. scabra (Dinarides, Hellenides and Balkanides vs. the Rhodope mountains). Spatiotemporal patterns of diversification suggest a role for a Late Miocene marine incursion in the Pannonian Plain (Paratethys) as the initial trigger of divergence, followed by a vicariance event in the Apennines and a “sky island” process of Pleistocene differentiation in the Balkan Peninsula. As it reached the Dinarides during the Late Pleistocene, B. v. variegata potentially hybridized with B. v. scabra and captured its mitochondrial DNA, which resulted in a massive cyto-nuclear discordance across all northwestern European populations. Finally, we show that the two lineages of B. v. scabra significantly differ in morphology and ventral coloration patterns, and describe the Rhodope lineage as a new subspecies.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/138687/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/138687/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/138687/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 23 Jan 2025 16:06:35 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Communicator whistles: A Trek through the taxonomy of the Boophis marojezensis complex reveals seven new, morphologically cryptic treefrogs from Madagascar (Amphibia: Anura: Mantellidae)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/121110/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 74: 643-681</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e121110</p>
					<p>Authors: Miguel Vences, Jörn Köhler, Carl R. Hutter, Michaela Preick, Alice Petzold, Andolalao Rakotoarison, Fanomezana M. Ratsoavina, Frank Glaw, Mark D. Scherz</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          The Malagasy stream-breeding treefrog species Boophis marojezensis contains bioacoustically and genetically highly divergent populations. Some of these populations have been defined as candidate species and emit somewhat bizarre advertisement calls consisting of multiple whistle-notes. We here enable a long-overdue taxonomic revision of this species complex by applying a museomics approach to sequence DNA from the holotype of B. marojezensis. Based on an integrative approach that combines divergence levels in mitochondrial DNA and in three nuclear-encoded genes, morphological data, and bioacoustic comparisons, we conclude that eight different species exist in this complex, seven of which are formally described herein as new. Although morphological differences between species are small and mainly separate small-sized from larger-sized species, conclusive evidence for the new species comes from their sympatric and sometimes syntopic occurrence without haplotype sharing in three nuclear genes and under maintenance of bioacoustic differences. Uncorrected genetic divergences in the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene are &gt;3% in almost all cases, and in some cases up to 8%. In reference to the otherworldly sounds by which these frogs fill Malagasy rainforests, some of them reminiscent of sounds of technical equipment in the fictional “Star Trek” universe, we here name and describe the seven new species in honor of fictional captains of starships, namely B. kirki sp. nov., B. picardi sp. nov., B. siskoi sp. nov., B. janewayae sp. nov., B. archeri sp. nov., B. pikei sp. nov., and B. burnhamae sp. nov. The majority of these species occur in northern Madagascar, where up to three species can occur in immediate geographical proximity, e.g., B. marojezensis, B. burnhamae sp. nov. and B. pikei sp. nov. at different elevations in the Marojejy Massif. South of 16°S latitude, only B. janewayae sp. nov., B. picardi sp. nov., and B. kirki sp. nov. are found, with the latter extending southwards to Ranomafana National Park. Our study confirms the existence of numerous morphologically cryptic and microendemic species among Madagascar’s amphibians, some of which are known only from unprotected sites and require adequate conservation management.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/121110/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/121110/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/121110/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 14 Oct 2024 10:03:24 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Four in one: An integrative taxonomic revision of the Microhyla berdmorei complex (Amphibia: Anura: Microhylidae) illustrates the tremendous amphibian diversity of Southeast Asia</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/127937/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 74: 595-641</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e127937</p>
					<p>Authors: Alexei V. Trofimets, Christophe Dufresnes, Parinya Pawangkhanant, Andrey M. Bragin, Vladislav A. Gorin, Mahmudul Hasan, Hmar Tlawmte Lalremsanga, Mohd Abdul Muin, Dac Xuan Le, Tan Van Nguyen, Chatmongkon Suwannapoom, Nikolay A. Poyarkov</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          Berdmore’s narrow-mouthed frog, Microhyla berdmorei (Blyth, 1856), is the largest member of the genus Microhyla and is distributed all over Southeast Asia, from Northeast India and southern China to Sumatra and Borneo in Indonesia. Here we demonstrate that M. berdmorei represents a complex of four species that are morphologically, acoustically, and genetically distinct from each other, and we implement taxonomic revisions. Phylogenetic analyses of three mitochondrial DNA (hereafter mtDNA, including COI, 12S, and 16S rRNA; 3119 bp) and one nuclear (BDNF; 716 bp) gene sequences are corroborated by phylogenomic analyses of 2700 ddRAD-seq loci (387,270 bp). All support that the M. berdmorei complex, which originates from the early Miocene (ca. 19.7 mya), consists of two clades that we date to the late Miocene (ca. 7.5 mya). The first clade, which regroups populations of large-sized individuals, is distributed in Indo-Burma and includes a lineage from Northeast India, Bangladesh, and Myanmar (M. berdmorei sensu stricto) and a lineage from West Malaysia, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam (for which we propose to resurrect the species M. malcolmi Cochran, 1927). The second clade, which regroups populations of small-sized individuals, occurs in Sundaland and also includes two lineages for which we provide taxonomic descriptions on species rank. The first new species is widely distributed from Peninsular Malaysia to the islands of Borneo and Sumatra (described herein as M. sundaica sp. nov.), while the second one is restricted to the Malay Peninsula and occurs in extreme southern Thailand and adjacent Malaysia (M. peninsularis sp. nov.). We further provide evidence for the synonymy of Callula natatrix Cope, 1867 with M. berdmorei sensu stricto, and M. fowleri Taylor, 1934 with M. malcolmi. Our study illustrates the high diversity of Southeast Asian amphibians, especially in the genus Microhyla, which presently totals 54 species.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/127937/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/127937/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/127937/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 4 Oct 2024 15:55:35 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Two new species of torrent-breeding treefrogs (Anura: Pelodryadidae: Litoria) from hill forests on the southern edge of New Guinea’s Central Cordillera</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/123251/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 74: 417-433</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e123251</p>
					<p>Authors: Stephen J. Richards, Paul M. Oliver</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          We describe two new species of torrent-breeding Litoria Tschudi, 1838 from low-elevation hill-forest habitats on the southern fringe of Papua New Guinea’s Central Cordillera. One is currently known only from the Kikori River basin, and the other is known from the Kikori and adjacent Strickland River basins. The two new species can be distinguished from all other Litoria by aspects of morphology and advertisement call structure. Both are known only from below 500 m a.s.l. and so are considered less likely to be threatened by the devastating frog pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis Longcore, Pessier &amp; Nichols, 1999 than torrent-breeding Melanesian pelodryadid frogs occupying higher, cooler habitats, should that pathogen be introduced to the region. One hundred and ten frog species have now been documented from the Kikori River basin, a near doubling of the total recognised when the first field guide to the region was published nearly 20 years ago, emphasising the rich anuran community of this area.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/123251/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/123251/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/123251/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 28 Jun 2024 10:30:54 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of the genus Amolops (Amphibia: Ranidae) and the first national record of Amolops vitreus from China</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/108013/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 74: 343-357</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e108013</p>
					<p>Authors: Yun-He Wu, Zhong-Bin Yu, Chen-Qi Lu, Yin-Peng Zhang, Wen-Jie Dong, Xiao-Long Liu, Felista Kasyoka Kilunda, Yun Xiong, Yun-Fang Jiang, Hong Ouyang, Zhong-Xiong Fu, Yun-Biao He, Zhi-Yong Yuan, Jing Che</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          The torrent frogs of the genus Amolops represent a great anuran diversification in southern China and Southeast Asia. Previous studies have shown that, the diversity of this genus still remains underestimated. During herpetological surveys from 2021 to 2022, several Amolops specimens were collected from the international border regions of southwestern Yunnan Province, China. Herein, we utilized molecular phylogenetic and morphological data to identify these specimens. Our findings indicate the presence of a separate and previously unknown lineage in the A. viridimaculatus group, which we formally describe as a new species. Furthermore, the specimen from Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve clustered with A. vitreus from the paratype, supporting the morphological diagnosis. Therefore, we describe a new species and a new species record for China. Our study contributes to the species richness of the genus Amolops as well as the diversity of amphibians in China. Notably, our discovery brings the total number of Amolops species to 85 and the total number of torrent frog species known to occur in China to 53. In addition, our study further confirmed that Yunnan and Indochina Peninsula have similar faunal composition, implying that more studies are needed to achieve a complete understanding of the species diversity and distribution pattern.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/108013/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/108013/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/108013/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 4 Apr 2024 18:15:41 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Unnecessary splitting of genus-level clades reduces taxonomic stability in amphibians</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/114285/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 74: 249-277</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e114285</p>
					<p>Authors: Stephen Mahony, Rachunliu G. Kamei, Rafe M. Brown, Kin Onn Chan</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          Although the differentiation of clades at the species level is usually based on a justifiable and testable conceptual framework, the demarcation of supraspecific boundaries is less objective and often subject to differences of opinion. The increased availability of large-scale phylogenies has in part promulgated a practice of what we consider excessively splitting clades at the “genus” level. Many of these new genus-level splits are predicated on untenable supporting evidence (e.g., weakly supported phylogenies and purportedly “diagnostic” but actually variable, non-exclusive, or otherwise problematic opposing character state differences) without careful consideration of the effects on downstream applications. As case studies, we critically evaluate several recent examples of splitting established monophyletic genera in four amphibian families that resulted in the creation/elevation of 20 genus-level names (Dicroglossidae: Phrynoglossus, Oreobatrachus, Frethia split from Occidozyga; Microhylidae: Nanohyla split from Microhyla; Ranidae: Abavorana, Amnirana, Chalcorana, Humerana, Hydrophylax, Indosylvirana, Papurana, Pulchrana, Sylvirana split from Hylarana; Rhacophoridae: Tamixalus, Vampyrius, Leptomantis, Zhangixalus split from Rhacophorus, Rohanixalus split from Feihyla, Orixalus split from Gracixalus, and Taruga split from Polypedates), and also address the taxonomic status of the monotypic genus Pterorana relative to Hylarana. We reassess the original claims of diagnosability and justifications for splitting and argue that in many cases, the generic splitting of clades is not only unnecessary but also destabilizes amphibian taxonomy, leading to a host of downstream issues that affect categories of the user community (stakeholders such as taxonomists, conservationists, evolutionary biologists, biogeographers, museum curators, educators, and the lay public). As an alternative, we advocate for the use of the subgenus rank in some cases, which can be implemented to establish informative partitions for future research without compromising on information content, while avoiding gratuitous (and often transient) large-scale binomial (genus-species couplet) rearrangements. We encourage taxonomists to consider the actual needs and interests of the larger non-taxonomic end-user community who fund the majority of taxonomic research, and who require a system that remains reasonably stable and is relatively intuitive, without the need for inaccessible laboratory equipment or advanced technical scientific knowledge to identify amphibian species to the genus level.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/114285/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/114285/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/114285/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Review Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2024 17:07:56 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of Brachycephalus (Anura: Brachycephalidae) from the northern portion of the state of Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103573/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 74: 1-21</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.74.e103573</p>
					<p>Authors: Manuella Folly, Thais H. Condez, Davor Vrcibradic, Carlos F. D. Rocha, Alessandra S. Machado, Ricardo T. Lopes, José P. Pombal Jr.</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                Brachycephalus is a genus of small ground-dwelling anurans, endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Recent molecular analyses have corroborated the monophyly of three species groups within this genus (B. ephippium, B. ephippium, and B. ephippium). In the meantime, the genus has been targeted as a group with recent taxonomic issues owing to its interspecific morphological similarity and genetic conservatism. Herein, we describe a new species of Brachycephalus from the northern portion of Serra do Mar mountain range, in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It belongs to the B. ephippium species group, exhibiting moderate hyperossification of the skull and vertebral column. The new species can be distinguished from all other congeners based on morphological, acoustic, and molecular data. Furthermore, we provide information on osteology and natural history of the new species.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103573/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103573/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103573/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 16 Jan 2024 18:57:39 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>﻿Contributing to the taxonomic inventory of green-colored rain frogs: A new species of the Pristimantis lacrimosus group (Anura: Strabomantidae) from the southern Cordillera Azul, central Peru</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/109309/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 1047-1061</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e109309</p>
					<p>Authors: Ernesto Castillo-Urbina, Miguel Vences, César Aguilar-Puntriano, Frank Glaw, Jörn Köhler</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                We studied the taxonomic status of a population of Pristimantis from the southern Cordillera Azul, Departamento Huánuco, central Peru. A phylogenetic analysis based on the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene revealed that it represents a lineage within the Pristimantis lacrimosus species group, being the closest relative of a species of uncertain taxonomic status from a lowland rainforest in central Peru (Panguana), and P. pulchridormientes from the Tingo Maria National Park. However, the focal lineage is divergent from all nominal species in the P. lacrimosus group for which respective data are available by &gt;7.9% uncorrected pairwise distance in the 16S rRNA gene fragment. An integrative taxonomic approach, including morphological and bioacoustic analyses, provided multiple lines of evidence for the focal specimens belonging to an unnamed evolutionary lineage at the species level that we describe and name herein. The systematics of Peruvian populations associated with the P. lacrimosus group are discussed, particularly highlighting problematic taxa with uncertain taxonomic status and unknown relationships. We point to scientific challenges and actions needed to achieve a better taxonomic resolution of this species-rich clade of frogs.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/109309/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/109309/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/109309/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Nov 2023 10:31:39 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Systematics of the Lao torrent frog, Amolops cremnobatus Inger &amp; Kottelat, 1998 (Anura: Ranidae), with descriptions of four new species</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102475/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 931-956</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e102475</p>
					<p>Authors: Jennifer A. Sheridan, Somphouthone Phimmachak, Niane Sivongxay, Bryan L. Stuart</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract          The Lao torrent frog Amolops cremnobatus Inger &amp; Kottelat, 1998 was recently hypothesized, based on mitochondrial DNA, to consist of more than a single species across its range in Laos and flanking regions of Vietnam and Thailand. We tested this hypothesis using mitochondrial DNA, nuclear DNA, and quantitative and qualitative morphological data from adults and larvae. We found corroborating lines of evidence for five distinct evolutionary lineages that we hypothesize to be species. Amolops cremnobatus sensu stricto is restricted to the southeastern portion of its previous range, and remaining populations are described as four new species. Some of the new species are easier to diagnose with morphology as larvae than as adults. Further sampling in northern Thailand may reveal an additional species of this torrent frog complex.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102475/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102475/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102475/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 4 Oct 2023 15:09:38 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of Boulenophrys from central Hunan Province, China (Anura: Megophryidae)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/100889/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 915-930</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e100889</p>
					<p>Authors: Tianyu Qian, Ke Hu, Xiaoyang Mo, Zhiwei Gao, Na Zhang, Daode Yang</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                We re-examined the megophryinid population from Mt. Hengshan, Hunan Province, China previously identified as Boulenophrys brachykolos (under the name Megophrys brachykolos). Based on newly obtained molecular data, this population appears to be an independent lineage with a relatively distant phylogenetic relationship to B. brachykolos sensu stricto. Furthermore, this population exhibits distinct morphological characteristics that distinguish it from all its congeners. Therefore, we propose to recognize the Hengshan population of B. brachykolos as a new species, Boulenophrys hengshanensis sp. nov. described herein.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/100889/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/100889/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/100889/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 3 Oct 2023 14:12:05 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of stream-living toad (Anura: Bufonidae: Bufo) from Guangdong, China</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/98558/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 677-689</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e98558</p>
					<p>Authors: Shuo Qi, Zhi-Tong Lyu, Han-Ming Song, Shi-Chao Wei, Qi-Feng Zhong, Ying-Yong Wang</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                In this work, we describe a new species of genus Bufo, Bufo exiguus sp. nov. from Mt. Nankun, Guangdong Province, China. This new species can be distinguished from all congeners by significant divergences in the mitochondrial 16S rRNA and CO1 genes and by a combination of morphological characters: small body size, tympanum absent, parotoid glands small and olive-shaped, tarsal fold absent, dorsal body with a fine vertebral line and white nuptial spinules present on dorsal and inner surfaces of fingers I and II in males. At present, Bufo exiguus sp. nov. is only known from the slow-flowing montane streams from its type locality and its conservation status should be carefully addressed.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/98558/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/98558/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/98558/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2023 16:39:02 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new pale-ventered nurse frog (Aromobatidae: Allobates) from southwestern Brazilian Amazonia</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103534/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 647-675</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e103534</p>
					<p>Authors: Jesus R. D. Souza, Miquéias Ferrão, Igor Luis Kaefer, Antonio Saulo Cunha-Machado, Paulo Roberto Melo-Sampaio, James Hanken, Albertina Pimentel Lima</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                We use integrative taxonomy to formally describe a candidate species of nurse frog of the genus Allobates from southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. The new species nests within a clade that has been defined historically as A. gasconi, but it has an 8.8–11.0% genetic distance for 16S to samples from the type locality of A. gasconi. The new species differs from congeners mainly by males having a translucent white throat and vocal sac; advertisement calls with a duration of 42–60 ms, two notes separated by an inter-note interval of 8–23 ms, and a dominant frequency of 4,953–6,331 Hz; and exotrophic tadpoles with 2 pyramidal papillae on each end of the upper lip and 10–13 pyramidal and cylindrical papillae surrounding the lower lip. Phylogenetic analyses based on mitochondrial DNA suggest that A. gasconi sensu lato as defined previously represents a complex of as many as seven species, corroborating studies that have shown high levels of cryptic diversity within Allobates.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103534/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103534/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/103534/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2023 16:37:02 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of Brachycephalus (Anura: Brachycephali­dae) from Serra do Tabuleiro, Southern Brazil</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102098/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 575-597</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e102098</p>
					<p>Authors: Sarah Mângia, Diego José Santana, Leandro de Oliveira Drummond, Leandro Talione Sabagh, Luiz Ugioni, Paulo Nogueira Costa, Milena Wachlevski</p>
					<p>Abstract: The number of described species of Brachycephalus has rapidly increased in the last decade (n = 22, which represents 56% of the total). Species of the genus Brachycephalus are mostly distributed in isolated mountaintops from Bahia (northeastern Brazil) to Santa Catarina states (southern Brazil), each one occupying only one or a few adjacent mountaintops. Herein, we described a new species of Brachycephalus of the B. pernix group, from Serra do Tabuleiro in Santa Catarina state, which also represents the southernmost known species. The new species can be distinguished from its congeners by a combination of characters, including the following: (1) “bufoniform” body; (2) small adult SVL: 9.57–11.10 mm for males and 10.88–12.70 mm for females; (3) head proportionally small (HL/SVL 19–28%) and eye proportionally large (ED/HL 36–56%); (4) dorsum texture rough; (5) snout shape rounded in dorsal and lateral views; (6) general dorsal body color olive green with head, arms and legs yellow-orangish scattered with olive green, and an orangish vertebral stripe spotted with white and brown colors; (7) skull and skeleton without hyperossification; (8) frontoparietal and sphenethmoid not fused; (9) advertisement with one or two high-frequency notes (6,115–6,562 Hz), and 2–4 pulses per note. The type locality is adjacent to Parque Estadual da Serra do Tabuleiro, a protected area, but we observed various agricultural activities in this locality, including the presence of exotic plants, which can change the amount and the quality of leaf litter, somehow compromising the population of the new species. Another aggravating factor is that the municipality of São Bonifácio has conflicts over land use with irregular occupation and unfinished expropriation processes in Parque Estadual da Serra do Tabuleiro. Considering that Brachycephalus sp. nov. is probably a mountaintop microendemic species, it is paramount that future studies quantifying the new species’ full distribution and evaluating population trends to accurately assess its conservation status.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102098/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102098/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/102098/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 14 Jul 2023 16:16:10 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>An initial molecular resolution of the mantellid frogs of the Guibemantis liber complex reveals three new species from northern Madagascar</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94063/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 397-432</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e94063</p>
					<p>Authors: Thore Koppetsch, Maciej Pabijan, Carl R. Hutter, Jörn Köhler, Philip-Sebastian Gehring, Andolalao Rakotoarison, Fanomezana M. Ratsoavina, Mark D. Scherz, David R. Vieites, Frank Glaw, Miguel Vences</p>
					<p>Abstract: The small arboreal frog Guibemantis liber (Anura: Mantellidae) has served as an example for the existence of deep conspecific lineages that differ by a substantial amount in mitochondrial DNA but are similar in morphology and bioacoustics and thus are assigned to the same nominal species. During fieldwork in northern Madagascar, we identified additional such lineages and surprisingly, observed close syntopy of two of these at various sites. In-depth study based on DNA sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene from 338 specimens of G. liber sensu lato from across its range, sequences of four nuclear-encoded markers for 154‒257 of these specimens, a phylogenomic dataset obtained by the FrogCap target capture approach, and additional mitochondrial genes for representatives of most mitochondrial lineages, as well as bioacoustic and morphological comparisons, revealed concordant differentiation among several lineages of the G. liber complex. We identify nine lineages differing by 5.3‒15.5% in cytochrome b and 2.4‒10.1% in the 16S rRNA gene, and find that several of these lack or have only limited allele sharing in the nuclear-encoded genes. Based on sympatric or parapatric occurrence without genetic admixture, combined with differences in bioacoustic and morphological characters, we scientifically name three lineages from northern Madagascar as new species: G. razoky sp. nov., G. razandry sp. nov., and G. fotsitenda sp. nov. Of these new species, G. razoky sp. nov. and G. razandry sp. nov. show widespread syntopy across northern Madagascar and differ in body size and advertisement calls. Guibemantis fotsitenda sp. nov. is sister to G. razandry sp. nov., but appears to occur at lower elevations, including in close geographic proximity on the Marojejy Massif. We also detected subtle differences in advertisement calls among various other mitochondrial lineages distributed in the Northern Central East and Southern Central East of Madagascar, but the status and nomenclatural identity of these lineages require further morphological and bioacoustic study of reliably genotyped individuals, and assignment of the three available names in the complex: Rhacophorus liber Peracca, 1893, Gephyromantis albogularis Guibé, 1947, and Gephyromantis variabilis Millot and Guibé, 1951. We discuss the identity and type material of these three nomina, designate a lectotype for Gephyromantis variabilis from Itremo, and flag the collection of new material from their type localities, Andrangoloaka and Itremo, as paramount for a comprehensive revision of the G. liber complex.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94063/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94063/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94063/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 28 Apr 2023 15:16:33 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new large Oreophryne species from the mountains of Papua Province, Indonesian New Guinea (Amphibia, Anura, Microhylidae)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94207/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 153-159</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e94207</p>
					<p>Authors: Rainer Günther, Djoko T. Iskandar, Stephen J. Richards</p>
					<p>Abstract: The microhylid genus Oreophryne reaches its greatest diversity in the New Guinea region, where more than 60 species have been documented to date. Most Oreophryne are small (&lt;30 mm SVL) and only three species, O. anthonyi, O. idenburgensis and O. inornata, exceed 40 mm SVL adult body size. Here we describe a fourth large species of Oreophryne that was collected in 1998 from the mountains of Papua Province in western New Guinea. In having a cartilaginous connection between the procoracoid and scapula it is most similar to O. idenburgensis, a species known only from the mountains of central-western New Guinea but differs from that species in a suite of morphological characters including a broader head, a hidden (vs. visible) tympanum and a more pointed snout.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94207/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94207/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/94207/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 7 Feb 2023 09:35:15 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of torrent-breeding treefrog (Pelodryadidae: Litoria) from the mountains of Papua, Indonesia, with new records and observations of Litoria dorsivena (Tyler, 1968)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91111/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 73: 127-139</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.73.e91111</p>
					<p>Authors: Paul M. Oliver, Djoko T. Iskandar, Stephen J. Richards</p>
					<p>Abstract: The mountains of New Guinea are home to species-rich but poorly understood communities of stream or torrent-breeding pelodryadid treefrogs. Here we describe a new species of moderately sized torrent-breeding Litoria from the mountains of Papua Province, Indonesia. The new species is most similar to Litoria dorsivena but differs from that species in aspects of body size, skin texture and especially the shape of the snout. Based on recent collections, we also present new data on the distribution and colour in life of L. dorsivena. Both species show marked sexual size dimorphism when compared to most other pelodryadid treefrogs, and the colour pattern of the new species may also vary between males and females. The torrent-breeding treefrogs of New Guinea remain poorly known and, given declines of ecologically similar pelodryadids in Australia, should be a priority group for taxonomic research and population monitoring.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91111/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91111/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91111/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 2023 11:18:43 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of insular treefrog in the Litoria thesaurensis species group from the Nakanai Mountains, New Britain, Papua New Guinea</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91422/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 72: 1067-1076</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.72.e91422</p>
					<p>Authors: Stephen J. Richards, Paul M. Oliver</p>
					<p>Abstract: The Islands of East Melanesia have a unique and highly endemic frog fauna derived entirely from overseas colonisation events. Within East Melanesia New Britain is a notable centre of frog diversity and endemism, with at least 15 endemic species, mostly in the ceratobatrachid genus Cornufer. Here we describe the first endemic pelodryadid treefrog from New Britain. The new species is a member of the Litoria thesaurensis species group but can be distinguished from near relatives by aspects of body size, webbing extent, bone pigmentation and male advertisement call. The two known specimens of the new species were collected in Hill Forest on karst basement in the Nakanai Mountains in East New Britain. The new species provides new evidence of diversification of insular PelodrydidaePelodrydidae, and reinforces New Britain, and especially the predominantly karst Nakanai mountains, as a hotspot of frog diversity in East Melanesia. In light of high rates of forest loss and conversion New Britain is also a region of significant conservation concern.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91422/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91422/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/91422/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 22 Nov 2022 17:17:34 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of rain frog (Anura: Strabomantidae: Pristimantis) from the Guiana Shield and ﻿amended diagnosis of P. ockendeni (Boulenger, 1912)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/90435/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 72: 1035-1065</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.72.e90435</p>
					<p>Authors: Alexander Tamanini Mônico, Miquéias Ferrão, Juan Carlos Chaparro, Antoine Fouquet, Albertina Pimentel Lima</p>
					<p>Abstract: Pristimantis is already the most speciose genus among vertebrates, yet the current number of species remains largely underestimated. A member of the P. unistrigatus species group from the Guiana Shield has been historically misidentified as P. ockendeni, a species described from southern Peru. We combined mitochondrial (16S and COI) and nuclear (RAG1) loci, external morphology, skull osteology (μ-CT scan), vocalization (advertisement and courtship calls), geographic distribution and natural history data to differentiate the Guiana Shield populations from P. ockendeni, and describe them as a new species. The new species is crepuscular and nocturnal and inhabits the understory of unflooded (terra firme) forests in Brazil, Guyana and Suriname. It is phylogenetically related to P. arda­lonychus, P. martiae and undescribed species from Brazilian Amazonia. The new species notably differs from P. ockendeni and its congeners in the P. unistrigatus species group occurring in the Guiana Shield by the combination of the following characters: absence of dentigerous processes of vomers, presence of vocal slits in males, body size (SVL 16.2–20.7 mm in males and 21.4–25.7 mm in females), advertisement call (call with 4–6 notes, call duration of 158–371 ms and dominant frequency of 3,466–4,521 Hz) and translucent groin coloration in life. To facilitate the recognition and description of cryptic species previously hidden under the name P. ockendeni, we provide an amended diagnosis of this taxon based on external morphology and advertisement call of specimens recently collected nearby the type locality and additional localities in southwestern Amazonia.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/90435/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/90435/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/90435/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2022 17:36:51 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Taxonomic clarifications on the floating frogs (Anura: Dicroglossidae: Occidozyga sensu lato) in southeastern China</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/80019/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 72: 495-512</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.72.e80019</p>
					<p>Authors: Zhi-Tong Lyu, Jian Wang, Zhao-Chi Zeng, Lin Luo, Yan-Wu Zhang, Chun-Peng Guo, Jin-Long Ren, Shuo Qi, Yun-Ming Mo, Ying-Yong Wang</p>
					<p>Abstract: The recognition for the floating frogs’ genus Occidozyga is in controversy for decades, and the species diversity of these frogs has recently been considered to be underestimated. In southeastern China, two floating frog species are currently recorded, namely Occidozyga lima and Occidozyga martensii. However, their current taxonomic statuses are unresolved after a series of recent taxonomic revisions. In this work, we perform morphological examinations and phylogenetic analyses on these two recorded floating frogs from southeastern China, to clarify their current taxonomic placements. The population previously recorded as Occidozyga lima should be re-assigned to the nomenclature Occidozyga obscura comb. nov., and the population previously recorded as Occidozyga martensii should be an undescribed species which is erected as Occidozyga lingnanica sp. nov. in this work.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/80019/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/80019/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/80019/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 1 Jul 2022 09:16:15 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Morphology, phylogeny, and species delimitation of Micryletta (Anura: Microhylidae) reveals a new species from Singapore</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/85020/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 72: 457-467</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.72.e85020</p>
					<p>Authors: Ananthanarayanan Sankar, Ingg Thong Law, Ing Sind Law, Rasu Shivaram, Robin K. Abraham, Kin Onn Chan</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Micryletta, also known as paddy frogs, ranges across much of south, east, and southeast Asia. Due to their relatively broad distribution and overall morphological similarities, many species have gone undetected until recently, largely owing to the use of molecular data. Consequently, the species diversity within this genus has quadrupled in just three years from three species prior to 2018, to 12 species in 2021, indicating that the systematics of this genus is still poorly understood. As such, we assembled the most comprehensive molecular phylogeny of Micryletta hitherto including novel sequences from a previously unsampled population from Singapore to assess the species diversity within this genus. In particular, we investigate the population from Singapore whose specific identity remains in question due to the lack of voucher specimens and genetic material. Our results show that the Singapore population represents a strongly supported and distinct lineage that is most closely related to M. inornata sensu stricto from Sumatra, Indonesia. Morphological and species delimitation analyses corroborate its distinction as a new species, which we describe herein as M. subaraji sp. nov. This and recent new taxon discoveries in Singapore demonstrate that the biodiversity of the highly urbanized island-state is still far from being fully realized and underscores the need for continued systematic surveys and protection of remaining habitats.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/85020/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/85020/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/85020/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2022 13:46:38 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>An integrative taxonomic revision and redefinition of Gephyromantis (Laurentomantis) malagasius based on archival DNA analysis reveals four new mantellid frog species from Madagascar</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/78830/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 72: 271-309</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.72.e78830</p>
					<p>Authors: Miguel Vences, Jörn Köhler, Angelica Crottini, Michael Hofreiter, Carl R. Hutter, Louis du Preez, Michaela Preick, Andolalao Rakotoarison, Loïs Rancilhac, Achille P. Raselimanana, Gonçalo M. Rosa, Mark D. Scherz, Frank Glaw</p>
					<p>Abstract: The subgenus Laurentomantis in the genus Gephyromantis contains some of the least known amphibian species of Madagascar. The six currently valid nominal species are rainforest frogs known from few individuals, hampering a full understanding of the species diversity of the clade. We assembled data on specimens collected during field surveys over the past 30 years and integrated analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear-encoded genes of 88 individuals, a comprehensive bioacoustic analysis, and morphological comparisons to delimit a minimum of nine species-level lineages in the subgenus. To clarify the identity of the species Gephyromantis malagasius, we applied a target-enrichment approach to a sample of the 110 year-old holotype of Microphryne malagasia Methuen and Hewitt, 1913 to assign this specimen to a lineage based on a mitochondrial DNA barcode. The holotype clustered unambiguously with specimens previously named G. ventrimaculatus. Consequently we propose to consider Trachymantis malagasia ventrimaculatus Angel, 1935 as a junior synonym of Gephyromantis malagasius. Due to this redefinition of G. malagasius, no scientific name is available for any of the four deep lineages of frogs previously subsumed under this name, all characterized by red color ventrally on the hindlimbs. These are here formally named as Gephyromantis fiharimpe sp. nov., G. matsilo sp. nov., G. oelkrugi sp. nov., and G. portonae sp. nov. The new species are distinguishable from each other by genetic divergences of &gt;4% uncorrected pairwise distance in a fragment of the 16S rRNA marker and a combination of morphological and bioacoustic characters. Gephyromantis fiharimpe and G. matsilo occur, respectively, at mid-elevations and lower elevations along a wide stretch of Madagascar’s eastern rainforest band, while G. oelkrugi and G. portonae appear to be more range-restricted in parts of Madagascar’s North East and Northern Central East regions. Open taxonomic questions surround G. horridus, to which we here assign specimens from Montagne d’Ambre and the type locality Nosy Be; and G. ranjomavo, which contains genetically divergent populations from Marojejy, Tsaratanana, and Ampotsidy.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/78830/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/78830/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/78830/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 26 May 2022 12:21:22 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>The curious case of Charles Darwin’s frog, Rana charlesdarwini Das, 1998: Phylogenetic position and generic placement, with taxonomic insights on other minervaryan frogs (Dicroglossidae: Minervarya) in the Andaman and Nicobar Archipelago</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/79496/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 72: 169-199</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.72.e79496</p>
					<p>Authors: Sonali Garg, Sivaperuman Chandrakasan, G. Gokulakrishnan, C. Gopika, Indraneil Das, S. D. Biju</p>
					<p>Abstract: Since the description of Charles Darwin’s frog as Rana charlesdarwini in 1998, its generic placement has been a taxonomic enigma. Subsequent studies first transferred this species to the dicroglossid genus Limnonectes, and then considered it as a ceratobatrachid of the genus Ingerana, which has since been moved to the family Dicroglossidae. However, recent works have doubted this generic placement and also suggested the possibility of its sister relationship with the genus Liurana, within Ceratobatrachidae. Nonetheless, there have been no detailed investigations to ascertain the generic placement of this taxon by confirming its phylogenetic position or using integrative taxonomic approaches. Here, we provide the first molecular assessment of Ingerana charlesdarwini based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA and reveal that it is nested in the dicroglossid genus Minervarya. A member of the Minervarya andamanensis species group, Minervarya charlesdarwini comb. nov. is sister taxon to M. andamanensis and shows relatively shallow genetic distances (2.8–3.6%) in the 16S gene. Both species are widely distributed, occur sympatrically, and exhibit high morphological variations, leading to long-standing confusions with other dicroglossid frogs reported from the region. Our combined morphological and molecular studies on dicroglossid frogs sampled across the known ranges of these species suggest that reports of Limnonectes doriae (Boulenger, 1887) and L. hascheanus (Stoliczka, 1870) from the Andamans are misidentifications of the former two, pointing to the absence of genus Limnonectes from the Andaman Islands. Our study also reveals the novel record of Minervarya agricola from the Andamans, a species that appears to have been confused with Fejervarya limnocharis and Minervarya keralensis in the literature and misidentified museum specimens, and is found to be widely distributed across these islands. We further find another congener from the Nicobar group of Islands, M. nicobariensis, to be closely related to M. charlesdarwini. Similar to the case of Andaman dicroglossids, our work emphasises on the need for further studies to ascertain the taxonomic identities and generic placement of Minervarya and Limnonectes species reported from the Nicobars.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/79496/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/79496/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/79496/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 10 May 2022 11:58:18 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Hidden tribe: A new species of Stream Toad of the genus Ansonia Stoliczka, 1870 (Anura: Bufonidae) from the poorly explored mountainous borderlands of western Thailand</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/73529/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 71: 763-779</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.71.e73529</p>
					<p>Authors: Chatmongkon Suwannapoom, L. Lee Grismer, Parinya Pawangkhanant, Mali Naiduangchan, Platon V. Yushchenko, Dmitriy V. Arkhipov, Jeffery A. Wilkinson, Nikolay A. Poyarkov</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                The integrated results of morphological and molecular phylogenetic analyses confirmed the new species status of a recently discovered population of Ansonia from Suan Phueng District, Ratchaburi Province, Thailand. Ansonia karen sp. nov. is separated from all other species of Ansonia by a unique combination of mensural, discrete morphological, and color pattern characteristics and is the sister species of A. thinthinae from Tanintharyi Division, Myanmar. This discovery fills a geographic hiatus of 350 km between it and A. kraensis from Ranong Province, Thailand. Ansonia karen sp. nov. is the newest member of a long list of range-restricted endemics having been recently discovered in the northern Tenasserim Mountain region of western Thailand and continues to underscore the unexplored nature of this region and its need for conservation.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/73529/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/73529/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/73529/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 3 Dec 2021 12:09:25 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>Description of a new Xenorhina species (Anura, Microhylidae) from northwestern Papua New Guinea</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/66954/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 71: 621-630</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.71.e66954</p>
					<p>Authors: Rainer Günther, Chris Dahl, Stephen J. Richards</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                We describe a new species of the asterophryine microhylid genus Xenorhina from the lowlands of northwestern Papua New Guinea. It is a medium-sized species (SUL of two males 29.2 and 29.9 mm; of four females 29.9–33.0 mm) that can be distinguished from congeners by having a single short, triangular odontoid spike (palatal tooth) on each vomeropalatine bone, moderately short legs (TL/SUL 0.40–0.44) and ventral surfaces heavily spotted with reddish-brown blotches or reticula. The advertisement call comprises 7–10 loud, melodious hooting notes lasting 141–165 ms and produced at a repetition rate of 2.19–2.35 notes/s. Description of this species brings to 41 the number of Xenorhina known from New Guinea and surrounding islands.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/66954/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/66954/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/66954/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 11 Oct 2021 11:33:33 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A new species of Proceratophrys Miranda-Ribeiro, 1920 (Anura, Odontophrynidae) of the P. bigibbosa species group from Southern Brazil</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/67894/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 71: 387-401</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.71.e67894</p>
					<p>Authors: Diego José Santana, Sarah Mângia, Suélen da Silva Alves Saccol, Tiago Gomes dos Santos</p>
					<p>Abstract: Abstract                The monophyletic Proceratophrys bigibbosa species group has a stable taxonomic history. Despite the increasing number of Proceratophrys described in the last decades, the P. bigibbosa group, for a long time, has consisted of four species distributed in south of South America; except for P. palustris that occurs in southeastern Brazil. Herein, based on concordant evidence of morphology and mtDNA barcoding, we describe a new species of Proceratophrys for specimens assigned to the P. bigibbosa group collected in Tibagi municipality, Paraná state, Brazil. The new species is diagnosed by its small size, snout rounded in dorsal view, palpebral ridge with small and rounded tubercles, small postocular swellings, presence of a line of small and round tubercles on dorso-lateral region of body, and dorsal region covered by small, sparse, and rounded tubercles. We also highlight the potential occurrence of the new species in other areas along the Campos Gerais of Paraná, given the strong association of the species with this vegetational formation in South Brazil.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/67894/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/67894/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/67894/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 2 Jul 2021 12:18:58 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
		<item>
		    <title>A taxonomic revision of the genus Phrynoglossus in Indochina with the description of a new species and comments on the classification within Occidozyginae (Amphibia, Anura, Dicroglossidae)</title>
		    <link>https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/60312/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Vertebrate Zoology 71: 1-26</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/vz.71.e60312</p>
					<p>Authors: Gunther Köhler, Joseph Vargas, Ni Lar Than, Tilman Schell, Axel Janke, Steffen U. Pauls, Panupong Thammachoti</p>
					<p>Abstract: We revise the frogs of the genus Phrynoglossus from Indochina based on data of external morphology, bioacoustics and molecular genetics. The results of this integrative study provide evidence for the recognition of three distinct species, one of which we describe as new. Phrynoglossus martensii has a vast geographic distribution from central and southern Thailand across southern China to Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Phrynoglossus myanhessei sp. nov. is distributed in central Myanmar whereas Phrynoglossus magnapustulosus is restricted to the Khorat Plateau, Thailand. These three species occur in allopatry and differ in their mating calls, external morphology, and in genetic distances of the 16S gene of 3.8–5.9%. Finally, we discuss and provide evolutionary evidence for the recognition of Phrynoglossus as a genus distinct from Occidozyga. Members of both genera form reciprocal monophyletic groups in our analyses of mtDNA data (16S) and are well differentiated from each other in morphology and ecology. Furthermore, they differ in the amplexus mode with Phrynoglossus having an inguinal amplexus whereas it is axillary in Occidozyga. We further provide a de novo draft genome of the holotype based on short-read sequencing technology to a coverage of 25-fold. This resource will permanently link the genetic characterization of the species to the name-bearing type specimen.</p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/60312/">HTML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/60312/download/xml/">XML</a></p>
					<p><a href="https://vertebrate-zoology.arphahub.com/article/60312/download/pdf/">PDF</a></p>
			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 26 Feb 2021 12:05:06 +0000</pubDate>
		</item>
	
	</channel>
</rss>
	