Revision of Litoria rothii (Anura: Pelodryadidae) from northern Australia
Author
Donnellan, S. C.
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia
Author
Catullo, R. A.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, WA, 6009, Australia
Author
Rowley, J. J. L.
0000-0002-2011-9143
Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, 1 William St, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia Jodi. Rowley @ austmus. gov. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 2011 - 9143 & Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia
owley@austmus.gov.au
Author
Doughty, P.
0000-0003-0631-0571
Collections & Research, Western Australian Museum, 49 Kew St, Welshpool, WA, 6106 Australia paul. doughty @ museum. wa. gov. au; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0631 - 0571
paul.doughty@museum.wa.gov.au
Author
Price, L.
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, 5005 Australia
Author
Hines, H. B.
Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service and Partnerships, 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, Australia
Author
Richards, S. J.
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia & Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, GPO Box 4646, Darwin, NT, 0801, Australia
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-10-02
5352
1
73
108
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.1.3
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5352.1.3
1175-5326
8406992
3F9D6C62-9F76-4663-B9E2-77EAF716C278
Litoria everetti
(
Boulenger, 1897
)
Nusa Tenggara
Laughing Treefrog
Fig. 6
Hyla everetti
Boulenger, 1897
.
Syntypes
: “numerous specimens”—BMNH 1947.2.23.60–65 (formerly 97.6.21.106–111) (Savu) and 1947.2.23.66–67 (formerly 97.6.21.104–05) (Sumba), according to
Condit (1964)
. NHMW 19509.1–3 also considered
syntypes
by Häupl & Tiedemann, (1978) and
Häupl
et al.
(1994)
. Type locality: “Sumba and Savu” islands,
Indonesia
; restricted to “Sumba” by
Forcart (1953)
.
Material examined.
See Supplementary
Table S2
.
Diagnosis.
Can be distinguished from
Litoria rothii
and
L. ridibunda
sp. nov
.
by the pattern on the hidden portions of the legs in life.
Litoria everetti
has an orange marbled pattern.
Litoria rothii
typically has an immaculate glossy black background with yellow or occasionally white patches with highly discrete margins, providing a strong contrast between the black background and the coloured patches.
L. ridibunda
sp. nov
.
typically has a matt black or dark grey background with yellow, orange or reddish coloured well-spaced patches or linear arrangements of coalesced patches often on the lower margin of the posterior thigh. The matt black or dark grey background and provides less contrast than is seen
L. rothii
.
It can be distinguished from
L. rothii
and
L. ridibunda
sp. nov.
by apomorphic nucleotide states at 17 and 26 sites, respectively, in the
ND4
gene alignment (
Table 2
).
Description including variation.
Tyler (1968)
described variation among 28 individuals from Savu, Sumba, Timor and Alor. Here we describe morphological variation based on another 16 individuals (
Table 4
, Supplementary
Table S2
). Mean SVL: females =
44.3 mm
(n=14), males =
39.5 mm
(n=2). Head length equal to head width (HW/HL = 0.9–1.1) and approximately one-third of SVL (HL/SVL = 0.3–0.34). Snout prominent, rounded when viewed from above and blunt when viewed in profile. Nostrils more lateral than superior, closer to snout than to eye. Distance between eye and naris equal to internarial span (EN/IND = 0.4–1.3). Canthus rostralis gently curved. Eye relatively large, its diameter equal to eye to naris distance (ED/EN = 0.9–1.2). Pupil horizontal when constricted. Tympanum distinct, circular, length slightly greater than half eye diameter (TD/ED = 0.5–0.7). The vomerine teeth are in two circular or broadly oval series situated between the choanae.
Fingers long, broad, webbed at base. Subarticular and palmar tubercles prominent. Terminal discs prominent, extending beyond lateral extremities of penultimate phalanx. Fingers in order of length 3>4>1>2. Hindlimb length moderate (TL/SVL = 0.5–0.55). Toes in order of length 4>5=3>2>1. Toes fully webbed. Subarticular tubercles not prominent. Oval inner metatarsal tubercle not prominent. Terminal toe discs prominent, extending beyond lateral extremities of penultimate phalanx.
Dorsum mildly granular. Upper surface of limbs smooth or mildly granular. Abdomen, undersurface of thighs, and lateral aspect of body coarsely granular. Distinct pectoral fold present. Vocal slits present in buccal cavity.
Colour.
Description of colour in life is based on images of four individuals from Timor (n=3) and Sumba (n=1). Dorsum and head vary from uniformly bone to light brown, darker animals tend to be heavily mottled with dark brown (
Fig. 6
). Upper surfaces of limbs with same colour and pattern as dorsum. Wrist sometimes with black mark. In lighter coloured individuals, supratympanic fold across demarked by a thin black stripe beginning at posterior margin of eye and continuous across the top of the tympanum to black patch in axilla. Lips usually immaculate. Snout or canthus rostralis with small black spots sparsely in lighter coloured individuals; dorsal pattern and coloration continuous with snout and canthus rostralis in darker individuals.
Posterior thigh with matt black markings varying from a few blotches to transverse patches separated by with orange patches occupying between 20–70% of the posterior thigh (
Fig. 6
). Vent same colour as surrounding dorsal colours. Fore of thighs and groin, outer margin of leg and dorsal surface of foot unpatterned. Ventral surface of legs plain. Axilla with blotches.
Abdomen plain white, immaculate or with indistinct dark mottling on anterior margins. Colour of throat in calling males unknown. Throat sometimes with small indistinct dark mottling otherwise unpigmented. Upper iris orange-brown, lower iris grey to light brown.
Habitat and reproductive biology.
Smith (1927)
collected several individuals and tadpoles in puddles near Tjamplong (elevation
100–200 m
) and Soë (elevation
800 m
) in West Timor.
Smith (1927)
described and illustrated the larval morphology from a sample from Tjamplong (elevation
100–200 m
) and Soë (elevation
800 m
) in West Timor.
Forcart (1953)
reported that newly metamorphosed frogs were collected on the leaves of shrubs and bushes in damp palm forest material from Prai Jawang, Sumba.
Kaiser
et al.
(2014)
encountered
L. everetti
and
Limnonectes timorensis
together along the Meleotegi River near Eraulo,
Ermera District
,
Timor-Leste
at an elevation of
1,200 m
.
Menzies (2006)
collected adults in the central mountains of Timor in the axils of bananas in a coffee plantation in a region where the natural vegetation was
Eucalyptus
woodland. The call has not been described (
Menzies 2006
).
Distribution
.
Lesser Sunda Islands
of Alor, West Timor, Savu, and Sumba,
Indonesia
and
Timor-Leste
,
0–1500 m
elevation (
Menzies 2006
).