Xenopus tropicalis (Gray, 1864)

Kanga, Kouassi Philippe, Kouamé, N’Goran Germain, Zogbassé, Parfait, Gongomin, Basseu Aude-Inès, Agoh, Konan Laurent, Kouamé, Akoua Michèle, Konan, Jean Christophe B. Y. N., Adepo-Gourène, Abouo Béatrice, Gourène, Germain & Rödel, Mark-Oliver, 2021, Amphibian diversity of a West African biodiversity hotspot: an assessment and commented checklist of the batrachofauna of the Ivorian part of the Nimba Mountains, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 275) 15 (1), pp. 71-107 : 92

publication ID

1525-9153

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EEFC14-FFAA-FFD4-FF7C-829CA57B7E9D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Xenopus tropicalis (Gray, 1864)
status

 

Xenopus tropicalis (Gray, 1864) View in CoL

Tropical Clawed Frog

Material: Two females, NGK-Nimba 0001 ( Fig. 13A), NGK-Nimba 0002, and two males, NGK-Nimba 0003, NGK-Nimba 0006. Comments : This pipid lives in forests, degraded forests, and gallery forests in humid savannahs from Senegal to western Cameroon (Rödel 2000). The species was seen in flooded paddy fields in the Yéalé village (07°31.928’N, 008°25.401’W; 425 m asl). In the dry season, frogs were easily caught in patches of the same shallow swamps. Some juvenile frogs measured 21.5–30.0 mm (N = 5), adult males reached 32.4–42.5 mm (N = 5), and adult females ranged from 48.3–53.3 mm (N = 4) GoogleMaps .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Pipidae

Genus

Xenopus

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