Title
Hiding in Plain Sight: A Fourth New Cryptic Species of the Adenomera andreae Clade (Anura: Leptodactylidae) from Southwestern Amazonia
Date Issued
09 September 2020
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Herpetologist's League Inc.
Abstract
We describe a new species of Adenomera from southwestern Amazonia. The new species corresponds to one of the acoustic patterns and morphotypes from Tambopata National Reserve (Adenomera "Forest Call II"), which was associated with the candidate species identified via molecular data as Adenomera sp. C in the phylogeny of the genus. The new species is distinguished from all congeners, except A. phonotriccus, by a unique advertisement call: Calls are composed of complete pulses, i.e., separated by silent gaps, whereas those of remaining Adenomera species are composed of incomplete pulses (partly fused) or nonpulsed calls. The new species occurs in southeastern Peru and north central Bolivia, with two sympatric records with A. chicomendesi. The taxonomic status of two candidate species (sp. D and sp. T) of the A. andreae clade in southwestern Amazonia still needs to be addressed by the acquisition of additional phenotypic and molecular data.
Start page
304
End page
314
Volume
76
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85091993430
Source
Herpetologica
ISSN of the container
00180831
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgments.—Financial support was received through research grants from the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP 2013/50741-7) and National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq 306623/2018-8). TRC has received financial support from a postdoctoral fellowship from FAPESP (2017/08489-0). Collecting permits were granted by the Peruvian government (017-2018-SERNANP-JEF; #001-2020-MIN-AGRI-SERFOR/DGGSPFFS-DGSPFS). We are grateful to Explorer’s Inn staff for their logistical support, and especially the local guides for walking the trails along with us during the 2018 field expedition; we thank A.A. Giaretta for research support by making available recording equipment during field expedition; Centro de Estudos de Insetos Sociais (CEIS) provided lab space; M.L. Lyra assisted with DNA sequencing protocols. The following individuals granted access to specimens under their care: A.A. Giaretta (AAG-UFU), F.P. Werneck and A. Silva (INPA-H), N. Pupin (CFBH), L.F. Toledo and K. Rabelo (ZUEC), M. Menin (CZPB-AA), A.L.C. Prudente and F. Sarmento (MPEG), T. Grant and A.S. Benetti (MZUSP), and G.F. Pontes (MCP). The Fonoteca Neotropical Jacques Vielliard (FNJV) and the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (ML) enabled access to Adenomera sound files.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus