Phylogenetics, classification, and biogeography of the treefrogs (Amphibia: Anura: Arboranae)
Author
Duellman, William E.
Author
Marion, Angela B.
Author
Hedges, Blair
text
Zootaxa
2016
4104
1
1
109
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4104.1.1
9b3e7716-1099-48ca-803b-620c25d788f1
1175-5326
265809
D598E724-C9E4-4BBA-B25D-511300A47B1D
Subfamily
Cophomantinae
Hoffmann, 1878
Cophomantina
Hoffmann,1878
:614
.
Type
genus
Cophomantis
Peters, 1870:650
, junior synonym of
Hypsiboas,
Wagler, 1830
:200
(fide Peters, 1873 “1872”: 772).
Definition.
Small to large, mostly arboreal frogs lacking casque heads; many have stream-adapted tadpoles. Chromosome complement 2n = 24, except 2n =
22 in
Hypsiboas albopunctatus
,
and 18, 20, and
22 in
some species of
Aplastodiscus
.
Content.
Seven genera 179 species.
FIGURE 11.
Representatives of species groups of
Hypsiboas
defined by Faivovich
et al.
2005.
A.
H. sibleszi
(
H. benitezi
Group), KU 181099, Km 127, El Dorado–Santa Elena de Uairén Road, 1250 m, Bolívar, Venezuela.
B.
H. lanciformis
(
H. albopunctatus
Group), KU 221881, San Jacinto, 175 m, Loreto, Peru.
C.
H. riojanus
(
H. pulchellus
Group), KU 160195, 6 km W Betanzas, 3330 m, Potosí, Bolivia.
D.
H. crepitans
(
H. faber
Group), KU 166781, 16 km northeast Barrancas, 140 m, Bariñas, Venezuela. All by W. E. Duellman.
Distribution.
Tropical and subtropical South
America
northward from
Bolivia
,
Uruguay
and northern
Argentina
to
Nicaragua
, and the Islands of
Tobago
and
Trinidad
.
Etymology.
The familial name is derived from the Greek
kophos
meaning dull and the Greek
mantis
meaning prophet. Hoffmann’s (1878) intention for the meaning of the familial name is unknown. The gender is masculine.
Remarks.
Our molecular data coupled with morphological data necessitate the recognition of one new genus within
Hyloscirtus
. Enlarged oral discs completely bordered by papillae and bearing large numbers of tooth rows are characteristic of four stream-breeding genera. Two of these genera (
Colomascirtus
and
Hyloscirtus
) are sister taxa in the Andes. The other two genera (
Bokermannohyla
in southeastern
Brazil
and
Myersiohyla
in the
Guiana
Highlands) represent independent lineages. The largest known LTRF is 16/
21 in
Myersiohyla neblinaria
Faivovich, McDiarmid, and Myers (2013)
.
Molecular data are available for only 56 of the 90 recognized species of
Hypsiboas
(62%). There are some clades that might be recognized as genera, but each is a progressive stepwise arrangement within
Hypsiboas
. First and foremost among these is the
Hypsiboas benitezi
Group (
Fig. 11
A), defined by Faivovich
et al.
(2005). Four of the species in this well-supported (98%) clade (
Fig. 4
) occur in northeastern South
America
, whereas two others (
H. nympha
Faivovich, Moravec, Cisneros-Heredia and Köhler
and
H. microderma
Pyburn
exist in the upper Amazon Basin. The
Hypsiboas albopunctatus
(
Fig. 11
B) and
Hypsiboas pulchellus
(
Fig. 11
C) groups also are well supported (99%). Likewise, the
Hypsiboas faber
Group (
Fig. 11
D) of Faivovich
et al.
(2005) is well supported (100%) in our tree, which contains, except for
H. albomarginatus
(Spix)
, the
gladiator
frogs that construct nests, as defined by
Kluge (1979)
, not the misuse of the term by
Köhler
et al.
(2010)
. However,
H. boans
(Linnaeus)
, a nestbuilding
gladiator
frog is related to
H. semilineatus
and
H. geographicus
in our tree. Such apparent discrepancies indicate that greater taxon sampling and more thorough molecular refinement is essential to construct a realistic phylogeny of this large group of Neotropical treefrogs.