Taxonomic assessment of the Bolitoglossa (Eladinea) subgenus (Caudata: Plethodontidae) with the description of two new species from the Cordillera de Talamanca, Costa Rica
Author
Arias, Erick
0000-0002-4449-1070
Departamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología, UNAM, AP 70 - 153 Ciudad Universitaria, CP 04510, Ciudad de México, México & Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501 - 2060 San José, Costa Rica & Museo de Zoología, Centro de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Ecología Tropical, Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica
eapiedra@gmail.com
Author
Chaves, Gerardo
0000-0002-4301-6569
Museo de Zoología, Centro de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Ecología Tropical, Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica
cachi13@gmail.com
Author
Kubicki, Brian
0000-0002-7674-7202
Costa Rican Amphibian Research Center, Guayacán, Provincia de Limón, Costa Rica
crarc@yahoo.com
Author
Parra-Olea, Gabriela
0000-0002-0175-925X
Departamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología, UNAM, AP 70 - 153 Ciudad Universitaria, CP 04510, Ciudad de México, México
gparra@ib.unam.mx
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-11-08
5537
2
211
233
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5537.2.3
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5537.2.3
1175-5326
14239475
BD3E35FA-7BEA-441E-920A-1946F78C19EE
Bolitoglossa
(
Eladinea
)
diminuta
Species Group
Our results show that the
Bolitoglossa diminuta
S.G. corresponds with the
B. robinsoni
species group of
Kubicki & Arias (2016)
. The group contains seven species:
B. aurae
,
B. aureogularis
,
B. diminuta
,
B. jugivagans
,
B. pygmaea
, and two new species described here. The
B. diminuta
S.G. is distributed along the Talamanca Mountain range, at
1060–3300 m
a.s.l. (
Fig. 1
). The species
B. aurae
,
B. aureogularis
, and
B. jugivagans
are known only for the specimens described in the original description; no additional material is known.
Bolitoglossa diminuta
:
This species was described by
Robinson (1976)
based on an adult female (SL =
31.1 mm
) from Tapantí, on the northern portion of the Talamanca Mountain range. The dorsal coloration of the
holotype
is brown with two lateral dark brown bands from the posterior margin of the eye to the anterior third of the tail. David
Wake
collected a second specimen (MVZ207052; photos in AmphibiaWeb) of this species in 1987, very near to the type locality, an adult female (SL =
31.5 mm
). This second specimen agrees in dorsal coloration with the
holotype
; however, the
holotype
contrasts less in color between the dorsal and lateral areas. Both females were found brooding eggs. We found a third specimen (SL =
31.6 mm
) in Tapantí, with a dorsal coloration pattern similar to Wake’s specimen (
Fig. 3D
). This specimen was sequenced, and it was phylogenetically related to
B. aureogularis
(
Fig. 2
).
Bolitoglossa aureogularis
differs from
B. diminuta
by its larger size, SL =
48.8 mm
in adult females (SL =
31.6 mm
in
B. diminuta
) and by contrasting the gular color of bright yellow with the belly color (venter relatively uniform in
B. diminuta
).
We believe that the specimen from Tapantí (UCR24413) can be referred with high confidence to
B. diminuta
since it was collected near the type locality (
ca.
5 km
). It is an adult female of similar size and coloration pattern to the
holotype
(
Fig. 4
). On the other hand, a possible scenario is that our
B. diminuta
specimen corresponds with
B. aureogularis
and we lack DNA data for
B. diminuta
[
sensu stricto
]. This last scenario is -for us- less feasible; however, due to the phylogenetic similarity between
B. aureogularis
and the specimen from Tapantí, it cannot be discarded.
FIGURE 4.
Dorsal views of the body of (A) the holotype of
Bolitoglossa diminuta
(UCR5217) and (B) the specimen of
B. diminuta
from Tapantí (UCR24413) in preservation. Photographs by E.A.
Bolitoglossa pygmaea
:
This
species was described by
Bolaños &
Wake
(2009)
based on 26 poorly preserved specimens from Cerro Fábregas. They described the species as miniaturized, with maximum SL =
36.8 mm
in adult females; with pale coloration and black pigmented stomach and peritoneum, venter unpigmented, almost transparent; and with large nostrils.
As
cited above,
one specimen
(
UCR11218
) of this species was collected previously in
Cerro Echandi
but referred to as a
paratype
of
B. robinsoni
.
In
March 2018
, we collected an adult female (SL =
29.2 mm
,
Fig. 3E
) on Cerro Fábregas. This specimen was uniform bright orange. This specimen from Fábregas in ethanol changed its coloration to pale yellow, similar to the type series. In
September 2015
, we collected
five specimens
of this species on Cerro Echandi (SL =
28.5 mm
in an adult male,
Fig. 3F
). These were variable in coloration; most were dark brown with large blotches. We concluded that
B. pygmaea
is polymorphic in coloration, possibly, the Fábregas population is uniform in coloration but those from Echandi are very variable.