Phrynobatrachus gutturosus ( Chabanaud, 1921 ) Guttural Puddle Frog

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 : 90

publication ID

1525-9153

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EEFC14-FFAC-FFD2-FF7C-811FA12978BE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Phrynobatrachus gutturosus ( Chabanaud, 1921 ) Guttural Puddle Frog
status

 

Phrynobatrachus gutturosus ( Chabanaud, 1921) Guttural Puddle Frog View in CoL

Material: Two females, NGK-Nimba 0095 ( Fig. 11H), NGK-Nimba 0096, and two males, NGK-Nimba 0097, NGK-Nimba 0098. Comments: A complex of cryptic West African puddle frogs is currently known under the name Phrynobatrachus gutturosus (Rödel 2000; Zimkus et al. 2010). One species of that complex, P. afiabirago , has been recently described from southern Ghana ( Ofori-Boateng et al. 2018). Frogs from this complex became known from primary rainforest to dry savannah habitats

(Rödel 2000; Rödel and Spieler 2000; Ernst and Rödel 2006; Nago et al. 2006; Hillers et al. 2008c), and their taxonomic status requires further research. We found P. gutturosus among leaf litter in a cocoa and coffee plantation (07°31.928’N, 008°25.401’W; 425 m asl). The plantation comprised a large pond and was used by people from the Yéalé village to grow rice. Numerous individuals of P. gutturosus were seen after sunset (1830 h GMT). Two females measured 18.5 and 20.0 mm.

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