A type catalogue of the reed frogs (Amphibia, Anura, Hyperoliidae) in the collection of the Museum fuer Naturkunde Berlin (ZMB) with comments on historical collectors and expeditions
Author
Tillack, Frank
Museum fuer Naturkunde Berlin, Leibniz-Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany
Author
Ruiter, Ronald de
Nederlands Openluchtmuseum, Hoeferlaan 4, 6816 SG Arnhem, The Netherlands
Author
Roedel, Mark-Oliver
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1666-195X
Museum fuer Naturkunde Berlin, Leibniz-Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany
mo.roedel@mfn-berlin.de
text
Zoosystematics and Evolution
2021
2021-08-10
97
2
407
450
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zse.97.68000
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zse.97.68000
1860-0743-2-407
DC2EBA6293A141938ADC2A79F7D658B9
9446F0CE40A752B4897F7B7B71BBFD29
Hyperolius phrynoderma Ahl, 1931a: 71.
Syntypes.
ZMB 39000 and ZMB 77734-77736 (formerly part of ZMB 39000), "Zentrales Deutsch-Ost-Afrika" [Central German East Africa, Central Tanzania, see comment below] collected during the first "Deutsche Zentral-Afrika-Expedition", 1907-1908.
Present name.
Hyperolius cf. viridiflavus
(
Dumeril
& Bibron, 1841).
Remarks.
Depicted in
Ahl (1931b
: 344, fig. 218). Another syntype, MCZ A-17643 with identical collecting data was sent in exchange to MCZ in 1932 (
Barbour and Loveridge 1946
: 130).
Laurent (1961
: 83) erroneously presumed that the five subadult specimens inventoried under ZMB 13701 could be the types of
Hyperolius phrynoderma
, but these specimens were collected at
"Bukoba"
by Stuhlmann and do not correspond with the locality given by Ahl for the types.
Ahl's
(1931a
: 72) vague locality information for the
H. phrynoderma
types is probably wrong and mainly based on the transfer of the expedition name to a region, i.e. "Central German East Africa" which would be geographically equivalent to
today's
central Tanzania. However, the zoological collections of this expedition mainly originate from northeast Tanzania, Rwanda and the adjacent Democratic Republic of the Congo, more precisely from the region between Bukoba on the western shore of Lake Victoria, Ischangi in the south of Lake Kiwu and Irumu in the Ituru Province of northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (see comments in
Barbour and Loveridge 1946
: 130; map in
Schubotz 1909
).
Currently, the status of this taxon is uncertain. In comparison to species in the
H. marmoratus
/
Hyperolius viridiflavus
group, the body is comparatively slender and the snout more pointed. Dorsal warts are distinct, and arranged very regularly, even in the single adult frog (ZMB 39000). Juveniles of the
H. marmoratus
/
Hyperolius viridiflavus
group have warty skin, adults usually have smooth skin).
Drewes (1997)
described a superficially similar-looking frog from the Serengeti,
Hyperolius orkarkarri
, which is currently regarded as a synonym of
H. glandicolor
(see
Channing and Howell 2006
).
Under the leadership of Adolf Friedrich, Duke of Mecklenburg, the first "Deutsche Zentral-Afrika-Expedition" was carried out from 1907 to 1908, to scientifically investigate the area of the African Rift Valley (see also remarks on
Hyperolius adolphi-friederici
).