Eleutherodactylus nitidus (Peters, 1870)

Grünwald, Christoph I., Reyes-Velasco, Jacobo, Franz-Chávez, Héctor, Morales-Flores, Karen I., Ahumada-Carrillo, Ivan T., Rodriguez, Christopher M. & Jones, Jason M., 2021, Two new species of Eleutherodactylus (Anura: Eleutherodactylidae) from Southern Mexico, with comments on the taxonomy of related species and their advertisement calls, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 272) 15 (1), pp. 1-35 : 14-15

publication ID

9B3E8106-74E8-428F-B0BB-3CCD9EFDF0F3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9B3E8106-74E8-428F-B0BB-3CCD9EFDF0F3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/670387A7-FFB1-FF9C-FF0F-F8B2FB1EF86B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eleutherodactylus nitidus
status

 

Summary Data for Eleutherodactylus nitidus View in CoL Species Group Members

To help differentiate between the two new species locality at 1,320 m asl ( Fig. 3B), calls were recorded of two males which varied from the type locality in consisting of five-note trills with an average duration of 230 ms and a dominant frequency starting at 3,630 kHz and reaching 4,000 kHz ( Table 4).

Eleutherodactylus maurus . The advertisement call of E. maurus is a single, drawn-out “chirp” best described as a “pipe.” Calls recorded near Ocuilan, in Estado de México, consisted of a single chirp with a duration of 205 ms, and a dominant frequency starting at 2,760 kHz and rising to 3,150 kHz. The amplitude was strongest at the middle of a call ( Fig. 11D). At a locality near Taxco, Guerrero, a call of E. maurus was recorded which consisted of a single, drawn-out chirp. However, the call was longer, averaging 275 ms and the amplitude was distributed in three sub-pulses. This indicates a further need to investigate this population. E. petersi ) produce a drawn-out whistle (whistle), two ( E. maculabialis and E. syristes ) produce multi-note or pulsed calls (trill) of various rates and notes, and one ( E. maurus ) produces a slow and drawn-out chirp (pipe). While a detailed account is given of the calls of the species we describe here, as well as some of their relatives, we refrain from giving detailed descriptions of the calls of E. nitidus , E. albolabris , E. orarius , E. petersi , E. pipilans , E. nebulosus , and “ E. rubrimactulatus ” pending a more detailed taxonomic study of this species complex.

Eleutherodactylus dilatus . The advertisement call of E. dilatus is a single high-pitched “chirp” best described as a “peep” ( Fig. 11C). Calls recorded at the type locality consist of a rapid chirp, with an average duration of 110 ms, and a dominant frequency ranging between starting at 2,550 kHz and 2,780 kHz.

Eleutherodactylus maculabialis . The advertisement call of E. maculabialis is a relatively slow multi-note “trill” ( Fig. 3). Calls recorded at the type locality consist of slow six-note trills with a duration of 180–210 ms, and a dominant frequency starting at 2,600 –2,900 kHz and rising to 3,050 –3,200 kHz. The call interval is about 40–55 ms ( Fig. 3A). At a nearby Eleutherodactylus sentinelus . The advertisement call of E. sentinelus is a single high-pitched “chirp” best described as a “peep” ( Fig. 3). Calls recorded at the type locality consist of a rapid chirp, with an average duration of 160 ms, and a dominant frequency starting at 2,560 kHz and rising to 3,100 kHz ( Fig. 3D). Calls recorded above the type locality at 1,900 m asl ( Fig. 3C) are slightly shorter and of higher frequency, with an average duration of 120 ms, and a dominant frequency starting at 2,700 kHz and finishing at 3,300 kHz ( Table 4).

Eleutherodactylus syristes . The advertisement call of E. syristes is a rapid but long multiple-pulse “trill” ( Fig. 11A–B). Calls recorded at two different localities in Guerrero consisted of 49–60 pulses, about 10 ms apart, with a total duration of the call averaging 500– 560 ms. The   GoogleMaps dominant frequency at Agua de Obispo   GoogleMaps , Guerrero, was between 2,700 –3,170 kHz, starting lower, peaking, and then lowering again ( Fig. 11A). At a second locality, slightly lower than Agua de Obispo   GoogleMaps , east of Highway   GoogleMaps 95, the calls tended to have a dominant frequency ranging between 3,000 –3,390 kHz ( Fig. 11B).

Eleutherodactylus albolabris . The advertisement call of E. albolabris is a single, multi-pulsed whistle, with the call continuous amongst the pulses and with a duration of approximately 150–250 ms ( Fig. 11F). Calls recorded at the type locality at Agua de Obispo had a duration of 160 ms, and started at a dominant frequency of 2,840 kHz rising to 3,015 kHz. Calls varied between 7–10 continuous pulses. At a second locality, near Vallecitos in the Municipality of José Azueta , Guerrero, the calls had a duration of 240 ms, and started at a dominant frequency of 2,740 kHz which rose to 2,915 kHz. Calls started with a multi-pulsed trill and then ended with several distinct pulses. This population’s call is best described as a combination of a “trill” with a “whistle” ( Fig. 11E).

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF