Two new frog species from the Litoria rubella species group from eastern Australia
Author
Rowley, J. J. L.
Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, 1 William St, Sydney 2010, Australia. & Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Author
Mahony, M. J.
0000-0002-1042-0848
School of Environmental and Life Sciences, The University of Newcastle, University Drive, Callaghan, 2308, Australia. michael. mahony @ newcastle. edu. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 1042 - 0848
michael.mahony@newcastle.edu.au
Author
Hines, H. B.
Department of Environment and Science, PO Box 64, Bellbowrie, Qld, 4070, Australia. & Honorary Research Fellow, Biodiversity, Queensland Museum, PO Box 3300, South Brisbane, QLD 4101.
Author
Myers, S.
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, Adelaide, 5000, Australia. & ALS Water Resources Group, 22 Dalmore Drive, Scoresby, Victoria, 3179, Australia.
Author
Price, L. C.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, 5005, Australia.
Author
Shea, G. M.
Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, 1 William St, Sydney 2010, Australia. & Sydney School of Veterinary Science B 01, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
Author
Donnellan, S. C.
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, Adelaide, 5000, Australia.
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-11-22
5071
1
1
41
journal article
3315
10.11646/zootaxa.5071.1.1
f94b8e6d-d8c9-4f3d-9460-9a0ffeb21a1a
1175-5326
5723255
E695DE38-387E-41E0-8188-532A907C3BB1
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
Slender Bleating Tree Frog
Figs 11
,
12
Holotype
.
QM
J91105
.
An
adult male collected from a small drainage in the northeastern corner of
Anstead Bushland Reserve
, near the junction of
Mt Crosby
and
Hawkesbury Roads
,
Anstead
, south-eastern
Queensland
(
-27.5406
,
152.8614
) by
Harry B. Hines
on
2 February 2010
.
Material examined.
See Supplementary
Table S1
for details of all material examined.
Dimensions of
holotype
(mm).
SVL 36.3
; HL 10.2; HW 10.6; IND 2.4; EN 3.4; ED 3.5; IOD 6.4; TD 2.1; FLL 6.7; Fin3L 8.9; TL 14.8; Toe4L 13.7
.
Diagnosis.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
is distinguished from all species in the
Litoria rubella
group by a combination of (1) adult body size
26–44 mm
in males and
33–43 mm
in females, (2) relatively slender build, (3) the presence of a single, continuous, irregularly edged, dark brown dorsal band, (4) the absence of light spots on the dorsum, (5) lack of a well-defined pale mid-dorsal stripe, (6) absence of distinctive pale markings above the groin, vent and along lower leg, (7) presence of a distinct dorsolateral line continuing to groin, and (8) adult males having a vocal sac that is black.
Description of
holotype
.
Habitus slender; head widest at eyes, slightly wider than long (HW/HL 1.04); snout rounded in lateral and dorsal profiles; nostrils prominent in dorsal profile; vomerine teeth in single row running laterally anteriorly to choanae. Tympanum circular and clearly visible, about half the diameter of the eye (TD/ED 0.61).
Fingers and toes with prominent terminal discs; fingers with basal webbing, toes half webbed. Relative lengths of fingers 3>4>2>1; of toes 4>5=3>2>1. Sub-articular tubercles present under fingers and toes but not prominent; inner metatarsal tubercles present and prominent, approximately one third the length of first toe. Nuptial pad oval, restricted to dorsal surface of proximal half of first finger, comprised of small granules. Legs short (TL/SVL 0.41).
In life, all dorsal surfaces dark brown, contrasting strongly with pale ventral surfaces of body and limbs (
Fig. 11
). Continuous, irregularly edged, broad dark brown dorsal band from the snout to the vent, extending laterally to the dorsolateral margin. Flanks light brown. Dorsum weakly granular, becoming more granular laterally, on venter and on thighs. Upper surfaces of legs, arms and distal lower surfaces of legs and arms smooth. A dark stripe extends from snout, through eye, onto tympanum continues laterally above arm and then along lateral ventral margin of body to groin. White bar directly under eye and tympanum, immediately posterior to the tympanum. Ventral surface immaculate light cream. Single vocal sac and chin darkly pigmented, brownish-black, lower lip cream (
Fig. 11D
).
FIGURE 11.
Holotype of
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
QM
J91105
.
A
) in life,
B
) view of throat in life,
C
) dorsal view in preservative
D
) ventral view in preservative,
E
) palmar view of hand in preservative,
F)
plantar view of foot in preservative,
G)
lateral view of head in preservative. Scale bar = 1 cm. Images in life Harry B. Hines and in preservative Jodi Rowley.
FIGURE 12
. Images in life of
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
A
) QM
J95155
,
B)
QM
J95156
, Mount Victoria, Bunya Mountains Road, adjoining Bunya Mountains National Park, Qld,
C)
QM
J93232
, Ocean View, Qld,
D)
QM
J86660
, Karawatha Forest Park, Qld,
E)
QM
J97210
, Samsonvale, Qld,
F
) QM
J96340
, Maroon, Qld,
G
) QM
J97210
, Samsonvale, Qld,
H
) QM
J96340
, Maroon, Qld,
I
) QM
J96341
, Barney View, Qld,
J
) QM
J86661
, Karawatha, Qld. All images by Harry B. Hines.
Variation
. Male SVL
26–44 mm
, female SVL
33–43 mm
. Summary of variation in morphometric variables for each sex is presented in
Table 5
.
Variation in colour in life is described from images (
Fig. 12
). Dorsal colouration varies from cream (e.g.
Fig. 12A
) to a warm medium brown (e.g.
Fig. 12D
), with a distinct darker brown or brownish-grey patch across head and down the back, narrowing in width over the axilla and then also on the mid-dorsum. Some individuals mottled (e.g.
Fig. 12F
). Paler mid-dorsal line absent. Distinctly darker dorsolateral line running from snout, through eye, over tympanum, and down side of body to groin varies from medium- to dark- brown Bright white patch on upper lip between lower margin of eye and insertion of the arm. Dorsal surface of limbs medium-brown; finger and toe tips vary from medium-brown to pale yellow (e.g.
Fig. 12A, B
). Back of thighs transparent pinkish-orange or yellow-orange with varying amounts of darker brown pigment and opaque, creamy yellow flecks (e.g.
Fig. 5A–C
). Belly white; vocal sac in males black when deflated and grey when inflated (
Fig. 12G–J
). Iris copper-brown (e.g.
Fig. 12E, F
) to reddish-copper (e.g.
Fig. 12A
).
Advertisement call.
Call descriptions are based on the calls of eight individuals, including the
holotype
(
Table 6
,
Figs. 6
,
8
). The advertisement calls of
L. balatus
sp. nov.
comprises a single, highly-pulsed note. Individuals had a mean call duration of 0.63–
1.12 s
and an average of 45–77 uniformly spaced pulses repeated at a rate of 57–89 pulses/s. Calls were amplitude modulated, increasing either smoothly or rapidly to a peak at approximately 10–20% of the call duration, but with much variation. The dominant frequency was 3.4–4.3 kHz.
Comparison with other species.
The distribution of
L. balatus
sp. nov.
overlaps with
L. rubella
and may overlap with
L. dentata
in the Scenic Rim area of Queensland, but it is allopatric with the other six members of the
L. rubella
species group (
L. quiritatus
from southern NSW and eastern Victoria,
L. electrica
from north-western Queensland,
L. congenita
and
L. pygmaea
in New
Guinea
and
L. capitula
on Tanimbar Islands,
Indonesia
). It can be distinguished from
L. rubella
by the presence of a continuous, irregularly edged, dark brown dorsal band and a less robust body (i.e. head much narrower than body in
L. rubella
). In addition, the call of
L. balatus
sp. nov.
is much higher pitched, of longer duration, with more pulses and a faster pulse repetition rate than that of
L. rubella
in south-eastern Queensland.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
is widely sympatric with
L. rubella
,
and with the two species often calling together these differences in advertisement call are readily apparent.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
L. electrica
by the presence of a continuous, irregularly edged, dark brown dorsal band (versus two dark chocolate-coloured bars across the dorsum). It can be distinguished from the New Guinean species
L. congenita
and
L. pygmaea
by absence of light spots (versus large and conspicuous in
L. pygmaea
, smaller and more variable in
L. congenita
) on dark dorsal background. It can be distinguished from
L. capitula
by the absence of distinctive pale markings above the groin, vent and along lower leg that are present in
L. capitula
.
L. balatus
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
L. dentata
by males having a vocal sac that is black when deflated and inflated (versus black or very dark yellowish black when deflated and yellowish brown when inflated). It can be distinguished from
L. quiritatus
sp. nov.
by males having a vocal sac that is black (versus yellow when deflated and inflated). It can be distinguished further from
L. dentata
and
L. quiritatus
sp. nov.
by having a distinct dorsolateral line continuing to groin (versus diffusing above insertion of arm), and more slender build (
Fig. 5
). From a genetic perspective, apomorphic nucleotide states at 28 sites in the mitochondrial
ND4
gene reliably diagnose
L. balatus
sp. nov.
from
L. dentata
and
L. quiritatus
sp. nov.
(
Table 7
).
Etymology.
The specific epithet,
balatus
, is a masculine Latin 4
th
declension noun, meaning “a bleating”, used as a noun in apposition to the genus name.
Distribution.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
is known currently from south-eastern
Queensland
from the Maryborough district in the north (Biggenden, QM
J24056
) to the foothills of the scenic rim (Barney View, QM
J96341
), west to the Bunya Mountains. There are records of
L. dentata
sensu lato
further north (e.g. Atlas of Living
Australia
), but there are no specimens or photographs available to verify these. The northernmost record of
L. balatus
sp. nov.
in the FrogID project to date is in Maryborough. We are aware of a number of cases of
Litoria rubella
being misidentified as
L. dentata
sensu lato
. Juvenile
Litoria rubella
, especially in the Gladstone region, often have extensive dark markings on the dorsum, causing confusion. We sequenced one such juvenile
L. rubella
(QM
J90515
, ABTC 127683) from the Mount Larcom area, near Gladstone to confirm its identity (
Fig. 2
). Further surveys are required to ascertain the northern distributional limits of
L. balatus
sp. nov.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
has a patchy distribution and is apparently absent from wallum habitats and from larger expanses of rainforest (
Fig. 1
). It occurs from near sea level, e.g., around the Woongoolba area (QM
J92771
, ABTC 127802) to ~
600m
in the Bunya Mountains and Conondale Range.
The ranges of
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
and
L. dentata
are in close proximity in the Scenic Rim on the NSW-Queensland border. We found individuals with discordant mtDNA ancestry and phenotypes (body habitus) in this area (
Fig. 7
) for which we currently do not have nuclear genotype data to establish their species identity. The Scenic Rim is characterised by mountainous terrain rising steeply above the coast and floodplains. Consequently, rainfall, temperature and vegetation vary markedly over very short distances. These patterns strongly influence the distribution of many vertebrate species in this region, and it is recognised as an area of overlap between northern and southern faunal groups (
Bryant & Krosch 2016
). Within
Anura
, for example,
Pseudophryne coriacea
occurs in the Scenic Rim area but is replaced to the north by
P. raveni
(
Ingram & Corben 1994
)
. The Scenic Rim area is also the northern limit for the anuran genera
Philoria
and Australian
Lechriodus
(the latter also has species in New
Guinea
). Additional nuclear genotyping is required in the Scenic Rim area to better understand the distribution of the two
Litoria
species
and in particular to assign species identity to records of this species complex from the Springbrook-Numinbah Valley, the O’Reilly’s Plateau-Christmas Creek-Canungra area or from the Great Dividing Range from Girraween National Park, through Main Range National Park to Toowoomba, and from Durikai State Forest.
Ecology.
Most publications concerning
L. dentata
sensu lato
do not include observations or data from
Queensland
, hence existing information on
L. balatus
sp. nov
.
is scant.
Delvinquier (1986)
recorded the protozoan parasite
Myxidium immersum
from Samford,
Queensland
, in a host now attributable to
L. balatus
sp. nov
.
Murray
et al.
(2007) list a single histological specimen of
L. dentata
from Belli Creek SEQ that was negative for the fungal pathogen
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis
: this record is now attributable to
L. balatus
sp. nov
.
The following information is from field observations (H. B. Hines & E. Meyer unpubl. data) or from FrogID as acknowledged.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
is a species of open forests, woodlands and occasionally rainforest. It appears to be largely absent from the coastal wallum communities and has not been recorded from any of the large sand islands of south-east
Queensland
(
Hines & Meyer 2011
). Data from FrogID (>630 records from
10 November 2017
–
30 June 2021
) show that this species frequently calls from disturbed areas, with 14% of records in urban habitats and 60% in rural areas.
The species has been recorded calling from September to March via the FrogID project. Males call occasionally from treetops and buildings during the day, particularly in hot and humid weather but persistent calling and congregations of calling males typically occur at night following heavy or prolonged rainfall during the warmer months. Amplexus has been observed in all months from October to March. Breeding occurs in shallow ephemeral drainage lines or wetlands with emergent vegetation, with small dams also regularly used. Oviposition, eggs and larval morphology, development and behaviour have not been documented.
Conservation status.
Litoria balatus
sp. nov.
is the most restricted of the three species, with an estimated Extent of Occurrence of
73,000 km
2
. There were no ill or dead specimens of
L. balatus
sp. nov.
in the study of
Berger
et al.
(2004)
that examined a large number of diseased wild frogs from south-eastern
Queensland
. The fungal pathogen
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis
has not been recorded in
L. balatus
sp. nov.
(Murray
et al.
2007) although screening is very limited (n=1). There are no documented or suspected population declines. Given the large Extent of Occurrence, persistence in disturbed areas and a lack of evidence of population declines, the species likely meets IUCN Red List criteria (
IUCN 2012
) for Least Concern.