A new species of Anomaloglossus (Anura: Aromobatidae) from the Pakaraima Mountains of Guyana
Author
Kok, Philippe J. R.
Author
Macculloch, Ross D.
Author
Lathrop, Amy
Author
Willaert, Bert
Author
Bossuyt, Franky
text
Zootaxa
2010
2660
18
32
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.199004
1967cb33-23fe-4cfa-9804-ff8420277315
1175-5326
199004
Eastern Pantepui
Anomaloglossus
species
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. beebei
by (characters of
A. beebei
in parentheses, see also
Kok
et al
. 2006b
and
Kok & Kalamandeen 2008
) its larger size, female SVL max
28.3 mm
[n=3] in
A. megacephalus
(
18.7 mm
in
A. beebei
, n=27), fingers with keel-like lateral folds, best developed preaxially on Fingers II and III (fringes not folded), toes with folded flaplike fringing (fringes not folded), throat in adult female blotched (immaculate), palm dark brown to black (yellowish), distinct dark bands on thigh and shank (absent), dark interorbital V-shaped band (absent).
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. breweri
(
Barrio-Amorós, 2006
)
by (characters of
A. breweri
in parentheses) its larger size, female SVL max
28.3 mm
[n=3] in
A. megacephalus
(
23.8 mm
in
A. breweri
, n=1), throat in adult female blotched (immaculate), median lingual process short, wider than long, tapered (distinctly longer than wide, tip pointed).
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. kaiei
by (characters of
A. kaiei
in parentheses, see also
Kok & Kalamandeen 2008
) its larger size, female SVL max
28.3 mm
[n=3] in
A. megacephalus
(
19.8 mm
in
A. kaiei
, n=25), fingers with keel-like lateral folds, best developed preaxially on Fingers II and III (fringes not folded), toes moderately webbed (basally webbed), dorsolateral stripe absent (present), oblique lateral stripe present (absent), throat in adult female blotched (immaculate).
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. murisipanensis
(
La Marca, 1998
)
in having (characters of
A. murisipanensis
in parentheses, all based on the preserved
holotype
, which is a juvenile and the only known specimen) fingers with keel-like lateral folds, best developed preaxially on Fingers II and III (fringes barely detectable), more webbing on toes, symmetrical cloacal tubercles present (absent), tarsal keel weakly to distinctly curved, slightly tuberclelike (straight, not tuberclelike), oblique lateral stripe always present, even if broken in spots (not distinguishable), no white stripe between naris and eye in preservative (present).
FIGURE 5.
Comparison of
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
sp. nov.
and the similar
A. tepuyensis
and
A. parkerae
. A: Dorsal view of preserved specimens of (from left to right)
A. megacephalus
sp. nov.
(IRSNB 1986, 27.3 mm SVL),
A. tepuyensis
(MHNLS 17401, 23.3 mm SVL) and
A. parkerae
(MHNLS 11089, 23.2 mm SVL). B: Comparison between midline distance from snout tip to an imaginary line between anterior arm insertions and the same distance reported posteriorly from the same imaginary line in
A. megacephalus
sp. nov.
and
A. tepuyensis
. In most
A. megacephalus
specimens (left, IRSNB 1986, 27.3 mm SVL) the distance reaches or surpasses the anterior insertion of thigh, whereas in all specimens of
A. tepuyensis
examined (right, MHNLS 17401, 23.3 mm SVL), the distance fails to reach the thigh. Photos by PJRK.
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. praderioi
by (characters of
A. praderioi
in parentheses, see also
Kok 2010
) its larger size, female SVL max
28.3 mm
(n=3) in
A. megacephalus
(
22.7 mm
in
A. praderioi
, n=1), Finger IV longer than I (equal), tip of Finger IV always surpassing the base of the distal subarticular tubercle on Finger III when fingers adpressed (barely reaching the base), toes moderately webbed with folded flaplike fringing (basally webbed, folded flaplike fringing not present on all toes), dorsolateral stripe absent (present), oblique lateral stripe present (absent), throat in adult female blotched (immaculate).
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. roraima
in having (characters of
A. roraima
in parentheses) fingers with keel-like lateral folds, best developed preaxially on Fingers II and III (fringes barely distinct, not distinctly folded), all toes with folded flaplike fringing (absent), webbing on toes moderate (absent).
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
can be distinguished from
A. rufulus
(
Gorzula, 1990
)
in having (characters of
A. rufulus
in parentheses) webbing on toes moderate (rudimentary), and most remarkably by ventral colour pattern; light with a few dark brown blotches in
A. megacephalus
(dark brown marbled with white blotches in
A. rufulus
).
The new species superficially most resembles
A. parkerae
,
A. tepuyensis
(with which it has been confused), and
A. triunfo
(Barrio-Amorós,
Fuentes-Ramos & Rivas-Fuenmayor, 2004
)
, in sharing a similar dorsal pattern. It should be noted that
A. triunfo
is a possible synonym of
A. tepuyensis
(Kok & Barrio- Amorós unpubl. data, see also comments by
Myers & Donnelly 2008
).
Anomaloglossus parkerae
is distinguished from
A. tepuyensis
and
A. triunfo
only by a few characters such as size, definition of dorsal pattern, and condition of finger and toe fringes (
Myers & Donnelly 2008
). Adults of
A. megacephalus
can notably be distinguished from those three similar taxa in having a more slender body (
Anomaloglossus parkerae
,
A. tepuyensis
and
A. triunfo
are distinctly stockier frogs), a comparatively longer snout and a larger, somewhat more massive head [See
Fig. 5
for close comparison between
A. megacephalus
and
A. tepuyensis
and
A. parkerae
; compare also with Duellman’s (1997: 10) colour plate of
A. parkerae
, fig. 30 (showing
A. parkerae
) in
Lötters
et al.
(2007)
, and figs. 13, 15 and 16 illustrating
A. tepuyensis
in
Myers & Donnelly (2008)
; see also below for further comments], and in having symmetrical cloacal tubercles (absent in all females of
A. parkerae
,
A. tepuyensis
and
A. triunfo
examined).
Direct comparison of specimens shows a difference in head size in
Anomaloglossus megacephalus
compared to the similar
A. parkerae
,
A. tepuyensis
and
A. triunfo
, as confirmed by plotting of morphometric proportions. Comparison of HL3 with BEL indicates that the new species proportionally has a longer head than
A. tepuyensis
(
Fig. 6
). In order to distinguish between those similar species, the midline distance from the tip of the snout to an imaginary line between anterior insertions of upper arms is measured, and that distance is then extended posteriorly from the same imaginary line. In two of the three available
A. megacephalus
adult specimens the distance reaches or surpasses the anterior insertion of thigh, whereas in all adult specimens of
A. parkerae
,
A. tepuyensis
and
A. triunfo
examined (n = 20), the distance fails to reach the thigh insertion (see
Fig. 5
B). It is noteworthy to mention that the only specimen of
A. megacephalus
in which HL3 is not longer than BEL is in poor preservation state.