Eleutherodactylus carlossanchezi, Arroyo, Sandy B., 2007

Arroyo, Sandy B., 2007, New frog (Brachycephalidae: Eleutherodactylus) from the Western Flank of the Cordillera Oriental of Colombia, Zootaxa 1389, pp. 61-68 : 63-65

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.175199

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6242051

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FA87FD-1547-9C60-BDD6-FB2BFF0570B7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eleutherodactylus carlossanchezi
status

sp. nov.

Eleutherodactylus carlossanchezi , new species

( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 )

Holotype: ICN 33502 (original field number JDL 19349), an adult female obtained at Km 33 road between Bucaramanga and Pamplona municipality, Santander, Colombia, 2550m; collected by John Lynch and Ricardo Sánchez on 1 October 1991.

Paratypes: UIS­A 2908, 2912, juvenile females; UIS­A 1028, 1231, adult females; UIS­A 2126 adult male obtained at the Estación Experimental y Demostrativa El Rasgón, Municipality of Piedecuesta, Santander (7º 3' N, 72 º 57'W, 2400 m altitude); UIS­A 2503, 2957, juvenile females; UIS­A 2507,2791 adult females; UIS­A 1309, 1311, 2083, 2507adult males obtained at Hacienda la Sierra, Santuario de Fauna y Flora Guanentá­Alto Rio Fonce, Municipality of Paipa, Santander; ICN 33503 topotype adult female collected with holotype.

Diagnosis: 1) Skin of dorsum finely tuberculate, that of venter areolate; dorsolateral folds short; 2) tympanum round 36–52% length of eye; 3) snout subacuminate in dorsal view, round in lateral profile; canthus rostralis distinct; 4) upper eyelid narrower that IOD, bearing small conical tubercle; low cranial crests; 5) vomerine odontophores triangular, posterior to choane 6) males with vocal slits and nuptial pads;7) first finger shorter than second, disks of fingers expanded; fingers II–IV bearing moderate sized disks;8) fingers bearing lateral keels; 9) series of small ulnar tubercles; 10) small tubercle on heel; smaller tubercles along outer edge of tarsus; 11) two metatarsal tubercles, inner oval, 1/4–1/5 size of outer rounded; supernumerary plantar tubercles present; 12) toes bearing lateral keels, no webbing; toe disks smaller than those of outer fingers; 13) dorsum tan with darker markings (occipital W, supratympanic stripe), concealed thighs orange brown and venter cream with brown spotting;14) adults small to moderate sized, males 20.2–24.3 mm, females 23.8–29.5 mm SVL.

Description: Head slightly longer than wide, HW 31–37% SVL in females, 35–36% SVL in males; snout subacuminate in dorsal view, snout rounded in lateral profile; nostrils weakly protuberant, directed laterally; canthus rostralis weakly concave, sharp; snout long, E­N 95–1.31% eye in females, 97–103 % in males; loreal region concave; lips not flared; upper eyelid bearing one or two small conical tubercles and small non­pungent tubercles; width of upper eyelid 37–67% IOD in females, 48–55% in males; low cranial crests present; tympanum round, its length 30–52 % eye length in females, 31–44% in males; supratympanic fold distinct, well­defined in males, obscuring upper edge of tympanum, ending behind tympanum, 1 or 2 conical postrictal tubercles, low tubercles anterior to tympanum; choanae not concealed by palatal shelf of maxillary arch, round; triangular vomerine odontophores posterior to choanae, separated by distance slightly less than width of an odontophore, bearing an arched row of 5–6 in adult females, 3–4 in smaller adults; tongue wider than long, posterior edge of tongue notched, posterior ½ not adherent to floor of mouth; males with vocal slits lateral to tongue.

Skin of dorsum finely tuberculate, with some tubercles on flanks, occipital W on anterior back; dorsolateral folds present, more prominent anteriorly; skin of venter areolate; skin of throat smooth; series of 1–3 ulnar tubercles in row; palmar tubercle bifid, larger than oval thenar tubercle; few supernumerary palmar tubercles, rounded, not conical, slightly smaller than subarticular tubercles; pungent subarticular tubercles; fingers bearing lateral fringes, round disks on all fingers; that of thumb scarcely expanded; first finger shorter than second.

Heel with small conical tubercle; series of equal sized tubercles among outer edge of tarsus; inner metatarsal tubercle twice as long as wide; outer metatarsal tubercle rounded, 1/4–1/5 size of inner; few, small nonconical supernumerary plantar tubercles; subarticular tubercles rounded, simple, non­conical; toes bearing lateral keels (almost fringes) but no webbing, when toes III and V addressed against toe IV, toe V longer than toe III, toe V reaches 2/3 way between penultimate and distal subarticular tubercles of toe IV.

Coloration: In life, dorsum brown with scapular darker markings; loreal region dark brown; canthal and supratympanic stripe black; flanks paler than dorsum, cream bars on flanks evident in males; concealed surfaces of thighs orange brown; ventral surfaces brown with some darker mottling; concentration of brown stippling on throat; anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs brown with cream transversal bands, iris bright reddish copper. In preservative, dorsum brown; occipital W; limb bars oblique, narrower than interspaces; canthal supratympanic stripe and labial bars dark brown; throat heavily stippled with brown; groin, anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs and shanks uniformly brown.

Measurements of holotype in mm. SVL 27.9, shank 14.2, HW 9.6, HL 9.9, upper eyelid width 2.1, IOD 3.4, tympanum length 1.2, eye length 4.1, E­N 3.8.

Distribution and Habitat: Eleutherodactylus carlossanchezi has been collected at localities from northern Santander to south­western Boyacá. Adults and juveniles are found on leaves at heights 1.5 to 2.0 m above the ground and are nocturnal. This species is considered rare in abundance ( Suarez and Ramirez­Pinilla, 2004) and was more frequently observed in primary forest. Eleutherodactylus carlossanchezi was not heard, male calling activity was not recorded

Etymology: The specific name is a noun in the genitive case and is a patronym for my grandfather, Carlos Alberto Sanchez, who has been worked on the Santander lands and who lives within the distribution of the species.

ICN

Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Museo de Historia Natural

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