Taxonomic re-assessment of the Australian and New Guinean green-eyed treefrogs Litoria eucnemis, L. genimaculata and L. serrata (Anura: Hylidae)
Author
Richards, Stephen J.
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, 5000, Australia. Email: Steve. Richards @ samuseum. sa. gov. au, and Conservation International, P. O. Box 1024, Atherton, Queensland 4883, Australia.
Author
Hoskin, Conrad J.
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, 0200, Australia. Email: conrad. hoskin @ anu. edu. au.
Author
Cunningham, Michael J.
School of Integrative Biology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, 4072, Qld, Australia. & Department of Zoology, University of the Free State, Private Bag X 13, Phuthaditjhaba, 9866, South Africa. Email: CunninghamMJ @ qwa. ufs. ac. za.
Author
Mcdonald, Keith
Queensland Department of Environment and Heritage, Wet Tropics District Office, P. O. Box 834, Atherton, Australia, 4883. Email: keith. mcdonald @ epa. qld. gov. au.
Author
Donnellan, Stephen C.
South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, 5000, Australia. Email: Steve. Richards @ samuseum. sa. gov. au, and Conservation International, P. O. Box 1024, Atherton, Queensland 4883, Australia. & Australian Centre for Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity, University of Adelaide, Adelaide 5005.
onnellan@samuseum.sa.gov.au
text
Zootaxa
2010
2010-03-08
2391
1
33
46
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.2391.1.2
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.2391.1.2
1175-5326
5308365
Litoria serrata
(
Andersson, 1916
)
was described on the basis of
six specimens
from
Atherton
,
Carrington
and
Malanda
in north
Queensland
,
Australia
.
However
the name has been synonymised variously with
L. eucnemis
Lonnberg, 1900
and
L. genimaculata
Horst, 1883
, both from the
New
Guinea region.
Currently
L. serrata
is considered a synonym of
L. eucnemis
by
Frost (2009)
despite evidence presented by
Richards
et al
. (1993)
that
L. serrata
is a junior subjective synonym of
L. genimaculata
and is quite distinct from
L. eucnemis
.
This
confusion reflects the morphological similarity of different populations of these moderately large treefrogs (males
30–50 mm
SVL), and lack of access to molecular genetic and call data from
type
localities.
Richards
et al
. (1993)
demonstrated that two morphologically similar forms in the
Litoria eucnemis
species-group occur in
Australia
and argued, based on calls, that the
Australian
population described as
L. serrata
should be referred to the
New Guinean
species
L. genimaculata
.
They
also demonstrated that
Litoria eucnemis
occurs in small, isolated populations on the
Cape York Peninsula
of northern
Queensland
Australia
, where it is widely allopatric to populations of
L. genimaculata
.
Recent
collections in
western New
Guinea
that included tissues suitable for molecular genetic analysis, and re-examination of
type
material described from New
Guinea
, have permitted a reassessment of the status of the Australian treefrog described as
Litoria serrata
.
FIGURE 3.
Bayesian majority rule consensus tree of
12S rRNA
nucleotide sequences from 77 pelodryadid hylid frogs from Australia and New Guinea. Numbers at nodes indicate Bayesian posterior probabilities and maximum likelihood non-parametric bootstrap proportions.
FIGURE 4.
Photographs in life of A)
Litoria eucnemis
, Muller Range
, PNG, B)
L. exophthalmia
, Namosado
, PNG, C)
L. genimaculata
, Waigeo
Island, Indonesia, D)
L. serrata
, Wooroonooran
National Park, Australia, and of preserved specimens of E) holotype of
L. genimaculata,
RMNH
4420, F) hand of
L. genimaculata
holotype showing extent of finger webbing, G) holotype of
Hyla rhacophorus
, ZMA
5823, and H) holotype of
Nyctimystes loveridgei
, MCZ
27823 including (below) close-up of large heel flap. All scale bars = 10 mm
Six names are available for New Guinean treefrogs of the
L. eucnemis
species-group that have large digital discs, dermal folds on the arms and legs, and males without vocal sacs. They are treated in order of publication, and evidence is provided subsequently that
L. serrata
is a species distinct from all of these congeners. The name
L. serrata
is herein resurrected from the synonymy
L
.
genimaculata
.