Sueny Paloma

Graduate Research Associate

New Species of Leaf-litter Toad of the Rhinella margaritifera Species Group (Anura: Bufonidae) from Amazonia


Journal article


Miquéias Ferrão, A. Lima, S. Ron, Sueny Paloma Lima dos Santos, J. Hanken
Copeia, 2020

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Ferrão, M., Lima, A., Ron, S., dos Santos, S. P. L., & Hanken, J. (2020). New Species of Leaf-litter Toad of the Rhinella margaritifera Species Group (Anura: Bufonidae) from Amazonia. Copeia.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Ferrão, Miquéias, A. Lima, S. Ron, Sueny Paloma Lima dos Santos, and J. Hanken. “New Species of Leaf-Litter Toad of the Rhinella Margaritifera Species Group (Anura: Bufonidae) from Amazonia.” Copeia (2020).


MLA   Click to copy
Ferrão, Miquéias, et al. “New Species of Leaf-Litter Toad of the Rhinella Margaritifera Species Group (Anura: Bufonidae) from Amazonia.” Copeia, 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{miqu2020a,
  title = {New Species of Leaf-litter Toad of the Rhinella margaritifera Species Group (Anura: Bufonidae) from Amazonia},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {Copeia},
  author = {Ferrão, Miquéias and Lima, A. and Ron, S. and dos Santos, Sueny Paloma Lima and Hanken, J.}
}

Abstract

We describe through integrative taxonomy a new Amazonian species of leaf-litter toad of the Rhinella margaritifera species group. The new species inhabits open lowland forest in southwest Amazonia in Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia. It is closely related to a Bolivian species tentatively identified as Rhinella cf. paraguayensis. Both the new species and R. paraguayensis share an uncommon breeding strategy among their Amazonian congeners: each breeds in moderate to large rivers instead of small streams or ponds formed by rainwater. The new species is easily differentiated from other members of the R. margaritifera species group by having a strongly developed bony protrusion at the angle of the jaw, a snout–vent length of 63.4–84.7 mm in females and 56.3–72.3 mm in males, well-developed supratympanic crests with the proximal portion shorter than the parotoid gland in lateral view, a divided distal subarticular tubercle on finger III, and multinoted calls composed of groups of 7–9 pulsed notes and a dominant frequency of 1,012–1,163 Hz. Recent studies have shown that the upper Madeira Basin harbors a megadiverse fauna of anurans, including several candidate species. This is the first member of the R. margaritifera species group to be described from this region in recent years, and at least two additional unnamed species await formal description.


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