A new species of large green treefrog (Litoria, Pelodryadidae) from Papua Indonesia
Author
Oliver, Paul
0000-0003-4291-257X
Environmental Futures Research Institute and School of Environment and Science, Griffith University, 170 Kessels Rd, Brisbane, Queensland 4121, and Biodiversity and Geosciences Program, Queensland Museum, South Brisbane, Queensland, 4101 Australia. p. oliver @ griffith. edu. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 4291 - 257 X
p.oliver@griffith.edu.au
Author
Günther, Rainer
0000-0001-9250-7658
Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany.
Author
Tjaturadi, Burhan
0000-0001-6922-094X
Center for Environmental Studies, Sanata Dharma University (CESSDU), Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
Author
Richards, Stephen J.
0000-0002-0251-3884
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, S. A. 5000, Australia.
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-01-06
4903
1
117
126
journal article
7929
10.11646/zootaxa.4903.1.7
dea5368a-ea89-41d0-a4d6-ea5191f1bc79
1175-5326
4574000
9AC78082-AB5E-45C3-993B-456640390493
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
Litoria
cf.
infrafrenata
(
Richards
et al.
2015
)
Lubis’s Treefrog
Figs. 1–2
,
4A
.
Holotype
.
MZB
Amph. 13.358 (FN
SJR 7946
).
Adult
male, calling when collected,
10 km
south of
Timika town
,
Papua Province
,
Indonesia
(
4.662°S
,
136.897°E
;
20 m
a.s.l.
), collected by
S.J. Richards
and
B. Tjaturadi
on
8 December 2006
.
Diagnosis:
A large treefrog that differs from other New Guinean
Litoria
in the following unique combination of characters: body large (adult male SVL to at least
69.1 mm
), moderately robust; vomero-palatines large, conspicuous, each with ten small teeth; labial stripe indistinct and not reaching rictus of jaw; dorsum uniformly bright green; parotoid glands absent; scapular region lacking deep skin creases; webbing between Fingers 3 and 4 extending halfway along penultimate phalanges; webbing on feet extending to discs on all toes except Toe 4; discs wide (3FD/SVL 0.071; 4TD/SVL 0.061); nuptial pads crescentic and broader anteriorly than posteriorly; ventral and lateral surfaces yellow suffused with pale blue along skin creases; iris pale reddish brown; upper half of nictitating membrane clear with dark dorsal margin; and advertisement call a single rasping note lasting 0.18–
0.30 s
uttered in very long (>5 min) series with irregular inter-note intervals.
Description of
holotype
.
Habitus moderately robust, limbs moderately long (TL/SVL 0.54); snout broadly rounded in dorsal aspect, blunt, steeply sloping in lateral aspect. Canthus long, poorly defined, nearly straight; loreal region sloping, distinctly concave; nostrils near tip of snout. Eyes moderately small (EYE/SVL = 0.10) (
Fig. 1
), nictitating membrane without flecks or lines of pigmentation. Tongue oval with shallow posterior notch; vocal slits long, extending from near angle of jaw half way to front of mouth. Ten small teeth on each of two prominent, slightly postero-medially directed vomero-palatine ridges. Tympanum moderately large (EAR/SVL = 0.082), annulus distinct except postero-dorsal edge obscured by thick, curved, postocular fold that extends from posterior edge of eye to above axillary junction. Skin finely but distinctly granular dorsally, slightly coarser on head. Lateral surfaces with large, flat tubercles; throat finely ridged, belly and ventral surfaces of thighs coarsely tubercular.
FIGURE 1
.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
holotype (MZB Amph. 13.358) from near Timika, Indonesia, in life. Photograph S.J. Richards.
Prominent dermal ridges along posterior edge of forearms and along shanks and ankles extending to toe 5 (
Figs. 1
,
2
A–2B). Fingers short, partially webbed, terminal discs wide (3FD/SVL 0.071), with circum-marginal grooves (
Fig. 2C
). Webbing reaches to half-way between penultimate subarticular tubercle and disc between Fingers 4 and 3, half way between penultimate and third subarticular tubercle on inner side of Finger 3, to disc on outer side of Finger 2, and is restricted to thin basal strip between Fingers 1 and 2 (
Fig. 2A
). Subarticular tubercles prominent, undivided. Relative lengths of fingers 3>4>2>1. Nuptial excrescences a narrow, unbroken patch extending along approximately half length of Finger 1, with distal half approximately equal in height to minimum width of Finger 1 and proximal half much narrower and tapering proximally, forming an approximate crescent (
Fig. 2C
).
Toes fully webbed, terminal discs moderately wide (4TD/SVL 0.061) with circum-marginal grooves. Webbing reaches discs on Toes 1–3 and 5, and to half-way between penultimate tubercle and disc on Toe 4. Inner metatarsal tubercle and subarticular tubercles prominent (
Fig. 2B
). Relative lengths of toes 4>5>3>2>1.
In life, dorsal and upper-lateral surfaces of torso and head uniformly green without any pattern; tympanic membrane with a distinct unpigmented U-shaped region (
Fig. 1
); mid-lateral surfaces of torso yellow with extensive pale blue reticulations along skin creases; ventral surfaces of torso and inner surfaces of limbs yellow or yellowish brown (
Fig. 2D
). Dorsal surfaces of digits light brown or yellowish green, ventral surface of digits yellowish, except discs unpigmented; webbing light purplish-blue, nuptial excrescences light brown. Dermal ridges on, and posterior edges of, forearm and hindlimb yellowish white. Labial stripe indistinct, pale yellow, extending to approximately level with posterior edge of eye. Lower half of nictitating membrane green, upper half clear with a dark-brown dorsal margin. Iris with light-grey base colouration, densely stippled with light brown to give an overall reddish-brown appearance, with scattered sparse darker-brown vermiculations; sclera with thin dark-brown inner ring and slightly wider pale-blue outer ring. Skin above eye with very thin pale yellowish-white band.
FIGURE 2
. Details of holotype of
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
holotype (MZB Amph. 13.358), A) ventral view of fingers and webbing, B) ventral view of toes and webbing, C) nuptial excrescences, and D) hidden colouration of thighs. All photographs by S.J. Richards.
In preservative, most dorsal and upper lateral surfaces mottled light to medium blue, including torso, head, outer forearms, shanks, Finger 4 and Toe 5; tympanic membrane heavily pigmented apart from broad U-shaped unpigmented mark; inner edge of forearm light buff, digits and webbing buff with faint purplish tinge. Lower lateral surfaces of torso buff with indistinct purplish-blue vermiculations. Ventral surfaces light buff and largely unpatterned, with exception of purplish tinge on webbing and digits, especially on feet.
Summary meristic data.
SVL 69.1; TL 37.4; HW 26.5; HL 23.7; EYE 7.2; TYM 5.7; IN 5.7; EN 4.7; 3FD 4.9; 3FP 3.1; 4TD 4.2; 4TP 3.8.
Advertisement call.
The call of
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
is a single rasping note, produced in long call series that can last at least five minutes without interruption. Fifty-four calls from a longer series produced by the
holotype
at an air temperature of 26.5°C have a length of 0.18–
0.30 s
(mean = 0.22, SD = 0.031) and were uttered over the course of
66.7 s
at a rate of 0.79 calls/s. However, calls within the series tend to be ‘clumped’ into groups of 2–4 (
Fig. 3A
), with intervals between calls ranging from 0.40–
3.17 s
(mean = 1.08, SD = 0.82). Energy increases gradually during each call, reaching maximum amplitude approximately halfway or slightly more than halfway through the call, before declining again (
Fig. 3B
). Although call length is as much as
0.3 s
, most energy is concentrated in the first 0.15–
0.20 s
of each call followed by an initially steep but then gradually more shallow decline in amplitude with a long, tapering ‘tail’ of low but detectable energy (e.g.
Fig. 3B
). Dominant frequency ranges from
1.480
–1.838
kHz (mean = 1.651, SD = 80.794 among calls. Calls are finely pulsed, and pulses are uniformly distributed, but pulses are of differing intensity, including ‘primary’ (strong) and ‘secondary’ (weak) pulses (
Köhler
et al.
2017
). Resolution of the secondary pulses in particular is insufficient to permit pulse counts within calls, particularly in the terminal half, so it has not been possible to calculate pulse rates within calls. To the human ear the call of
L. lubisi
sp. nov.
resembles a rapidly repeated short, harsh, rasping note.
FIGURE 3
. Calls of
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov
.
: A) oscillogram (top) and spectrogram (bottom) of fifteen consecutive calls of
L. lubisi
recorded at an air temperature of 26.5°C, illustrating clumped pattern of call production in a long series; B) expanded view of the last three calls of the series illustrated in A, showing pattern of energy distribution within each call.
Comparisons.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
differs from all other
Litoria
except taxa in the
L. infrafrenata
group in having the following set of characters; adult size large (>
55 mm
SVL), dorsal colouration uniform and green, paratoid glands not evident pupil horizontal, and webbing not extending to discs on the fingers, but extending discs on most toes.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 4A
) differs from the four other species in the
L. infrafrenata
Group as follows: from
L. infrafrenata
(
Fig. 4B
) by having sides yellow suffused with pale blue (versus plain light yellow or off white), pale labial stripe indistinct, ending before posterior edge of lower jaw (versus distinct and extending to tympanum), and advertisement call a single rasping note lasting 0.18–
0.30 s
(versus call comprising two notes lasting in total ~
0.11 s
, each note lasting 0.04–
0.045 s
;
De la Riva
et al.
2004
); from
L. multicolor
in its larger size (adult male SVL
69 mm
versus SVL of
49.1–55.4 mm
, n = 14;
Günther 2004
), dorsal colouration uniformly green (versus green, grey, brown or yellow, and often patterned with black spots), red spots on venter and thighs absent (versus present), webbing extending to beyond penultimate subarticular tubercle on Fingers 3 and 4 (versus ending at subarticular tubercle on Finger 4 and before subarticular tubercle on Finger 3), and advertisement call consisting of a single rasping note lasting 0.18–
0.30 s
(versus ‘wooden rattles’ containing 7–10 notes and lasting 0.53–
0.86 s
;
Günther 2004
); from
L purpureolata
(
Fig. 4C
) in having head broader (HW/SVL 0.38 versus 0.33–0.37; n = 10), discs wider (3FD/SVL 0.071 versus
0.054
–0.066
; n = 10), venter yellow (versus purple), sides yellow suffused with purple (versus predominately purple), webbing extending distal to penultimate tubercle between Fingers 3 and 4 (versus ending at tubercle), and single-note rasping calls lasting 0.18–
0.30 s
at a rate of 0.79 calls/s (versus single-note calls lasting 0.11–
0.17 s
uttered at a rate of 1.76 calls/s at the same temperature) (
Oliver et al 2007
); and from
L. sanguinolenta
(
Fig. 4D
) by its larger size (male SVL
69 mm
versus maximum male SVL
55 mm
; n = 10), latero-ventral regions of torso yellow with light purple reticulations (versus white), webbing extending beyond penultimate subarticular tubercle on Fingers 3 and 4 (versus ending at subarticular tubercle on Finger 4, and before subarticular tubercle on Finger 3) and advertisement call consisting of a single rasping note lasting 0.18–
0.30 s
(versus call consisting of 6–8 pulsed notes and lasting 0.31–
0.47 s
;
De la Riva
et al.
2004
).
FIGURE 4.
Predominently green species in the
L. infrafrenata
Group in life. A)
L. lubisi
sp. nov.
, B)
L. infrafrenata
from the Kikori River Basin, Papua New Guinea, C)
L. purpureolata
from the Cyclops Mountains, Indonesia, and D)
L. sanguinolenta
from the Timika area, Indonesia. All photographs by S.J. Richards.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
is also similar in size and build to members of the
L. graminea
Group but differs from all known species in that group by having webbing on hands not extending to penultimate tubercle on inner side of Finger 3 (versus extending beyond penultimate tubercle).
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
further differs from
Litoria dux
Richards & Oliver,
2006
in having nuptial pads elongate and larger than disc on Finger 1 (versus rounded and half size of disc), iris reddish brown (versus white and reddish), and advertisement calls produced at much shorter intervals (every 0.4–
3.2 s
versus every 7–30 s) at similar temperatures, with evenly distributed (versus clumped) pulses (Richards & Oliver 2006); from
L. graminea
(
Boulenger, 1905
)
by having nuptial pads elongate, larger than disc on Finger 1 (versus rounded and half size of disc), iris reddish brown (versus ‘tan/pale gray with red margin, finely stippled with black’;
Kraus 2018
), and the sole specimen lacks deep skin creases extending to shoulder (versus usually present); from
L. huntorum
Richards, Oliver, Dahl & Tjaturadi 2006
, by iris reddish brown (versus white with reddish outer rim), size larger (male SVL
69 mm
versus
53–60 mm
; n = 5), lateral edges of venter and webbing yellow suffused with purplish-blue (versus orange), indistinct labial stripe ending before rictus (versus extending to below tympanum), and advertisement call a short, rasping note lasting 0.18–
0.30 s
(versus long guttural grunt lasting 0.7–
0.9 s
; Richards
et al.
2006); from
L. nullicedens
Kraus, 2018
by nuptial pads elongate (versus round and small), labial stripe weak, white (versus absent), iris predominately reddish brown (versus reticulated black and dark brown), nictitating membrane without flecking (versus present), and sides, abdomen, and webbing of hands and feet yellow and purple (versus bright orange-red;
Kraus 2018
); from
L. pallidofemora
Kraus, 2018
by having a narrower snout (EN/IN = 0.82 versus 0.97–1.04; n = 6,
Kraus 2018
), lateral edges of venter and webbing yellow suffused with purplish-blue (versus yellow or orange), and iris predominately reddish-brown (versus tan or reddish with a wide black outer margin), and may also be a smaller species (adult male SVL
69.1 mm
versus
73.5–79.7 mm
; n = 6), although larger sample sizes are required to confirm this; from
L. pterodactyla
Oliver, Donnellan & Richards, 2019
by its venter and webbing yellow suffused with light blue (versus overall blue), calls shorter (0.18–3.0 versus 0.95–
1.01 s
) with uniformly distributed (versus clumped) pulses (S. Richards unpublished data from four calls associated with the
L. pterodactyla
holotype
that are of insufficient quality for more detailed analysis); and from
L. sauroni
Richards & Oliver,
2006
in having iris reddish-brown (versus with red and black vermiculations), pigment flecks across lower eyelid absent (versus present), nuptial pads elongate (versus small and round), and advertisement calls with much shorter intervals (every 0.4–
3.2 s
versus every 7–30 s) at similar temperatures, with evenly distributed (versus clumped) pulses (Richards & Oliver 2006).
Distribution and natural history.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
is currently known only from a single locality south of Timika in
Papua Province
,
Indonesia
(
Fig. 5
). The single animal was calling from ~
8 m
high between the fronds of a Sago Palm
Metroxylon sagu
Rottbøll
at night in a densely vegetated, flooded swamp. One other animal was heard calling nearby but the deep water and spiny vegetation prevented its capture. It was producing a vocalisation that to the ear was indistinguishable from that produced by the
holotype
. This species probably breeds in these lowland rainforest swamps; it was not detected during extensive surveys in non-swamp rainforest habitats near the type locality (S. Richards and B. Tjaturadi pers. obs.).
FIGURE 5.
Distribution of species in the
Litoria infrafrenata
Group:
L. lubisi
sp. nov.
(red star);
L. sanguinolenta
(green squares):
L. multicolor
(purple circle);
L. purpureolata
(blue triangles); and
L. infrafrenata
(orange outline spanning from Australia, New Guinea and eastern Wallacea).
Suggested IUCN Status.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
is only known from a single specimen. There are large areas of suitable lowland habitat across southern
Papua Province
, and human population density in most of this region remains low. However, until its distribution and potential threats (if any) are better documented, we suggest that the species be assessed at Data Deficient.
Etymology:
This species is named for Pak Rusdian Lubis in gratitude for his support of our field survey in the PT Freeport
Indonesia
Contract of Work area.
Discussion
The description of
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
brings the number of recognised species in the
L infrafrenata
Group to five.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
and
L. multicolor
have only been reported from their
type
localities in the western portion of New
Guinea
(
Günther 2004
; this paper) (
Fig. 5
).
Litoria purpureolata
and
L. sanguinolenta
occur more widely across Indonesian New
Guinea
and into far western
Papua New Guinea
.
Litoria infrafrenata
has a broad distribution across all of lowland New
Guinea
, far northern
Queensland
,
Australia
, and many nearby islands (
Fig. 5
). The high proportion of species in the
L. infrafrenata
Group recorded only from the western portion of New
Guinea
contrasts with the morphologically and ecologically similar
L. graminea
Group, for which most diversity has been documented to the east in
Papua New Guinea
(
Kraus 2018
;
Oliver
et al.
2019b
). Assuming that these two species groups are monophyletic, this pattern suggests different geographic centres of historical diversification. Members of the
L. infrafrenata
Group also appear to be more often associated with swampy lowland forest habitats where at least some taxa congregate near the forest floor, while members of the
L. graminea
Group are associated with lowland or hill forest habitats and are not observed in large numbers below the forest canopy (Richards & Oliver 2006;
Kraus 2018
; S. Richards, pers. obs).
Recent fieldwork and taxonomic investigations have revealed that multiple species of large green treefrogs within both the
L. graminea
and
L. infrafrenata
Groups
have overlapping ranges across large areas of New
Guinea
, especially south of the Central Cordillera. To the east in
Papua New Guinea
this includes three species in the
L. graminea
Group (
L. pallidofemora
,
L. pterodactyla
and
L. sauroni
) that are relatively similar in body size (Richards & Oliver 2006;
Kraus 2018
;
Oliver
et al.
2019b
). These are all highly arboreal, and their breeding ecology remains poorly understood. With the description of
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
, three species in the
L. infrafrenata
Group are now also known from south of the cordillera in the western (Indonesian) portion of New
Guinea
. These three species show clearer differentiation in size than species in the
L
.
graminea
Group, providing at least one potential axis of ecological differentiation between these putatively related species. Furthermore, there is at least some evidence of habitat differentiation.
Litoria lubisi
sp. nov.
has only been observed in flooded lowland swamp habitats dominated by Sago palm and
Pandanus
species. This habitat
type
is likely to be under-surveyed because it is often flooded, has few roads and supports large populations of both mosquitos and crocodiles, making it extremely difficult to access. In contrast
L. sanguinolenta
breeds in shallow pools in flooded lowland rainforest (Richards pers. obs.), while the extremely large
L. infrafrenata
is widespread and common in both natural and disturbed habitats.