Microhyla cf. heymonsi Vogt, 1911

Badli-Sham, Baizul Hafsyam, Syafiq, Muhamad Fatihah, Aziz, Mohd Shahrizan Azrul, Mohd Jalil, Natrah Rafiqah, Awang, Muhammad Taufik, Othman, Muhammad Nouril Ammin, Abdul Aziz, Anis Azira, Dzu, Khunirah, Abdol Wahab, Nurul Asyikin, Jamil, Nor Liyana, Ismail, Murni Azima, Wan Azman, Wan Ahmad Aidil, Xin Wei, Ooi, Jamaha, Nur Ain Nabilah, Aqmal-Naser, Mohamad, Fahmi-Ahmad, Muhammad, Shahirah-Ibrahim, Noor, Rizal, Syed Ahmad, Belabut, Daicus M., Kin Onn, Chan, Quah, Evan Seng Huat, Grismer, Larry Lee & Ahmad, Amirrudin B., 2023, A decade of amphibian studies (Animalia, Amphibia) at Sekayu lowland forest, Hulu Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia, ZooKeys 1157, pp. 43-93 : 43

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1157.95873

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D4FDD1DB-B1EA-46F3-B638-8A3D888F148E

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7FA256CC-D41E-5ED1-9CE3-F9591AC817EF

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Microhyla cf. heymonsi Vogt, 1911
status

 

Microhyla cf. heymonsi Vogt, 1911

Fig. 5G Heymon’s Narrow-mouthed Frog View Figure 5

Examined specimens.

Nine specimens were collected from SRF (Males: UMTZC1028, UMTZC1067, UMTZC1224, and UMTZC1226, SVL = 17-24 mm; Females: UMTZC1008 and UMTZC1066, SVL = 25-27 mm) and SAP (Males: UMTZC1320 and UMTZC1489, SVL = 17-20 mm; Female: UMTZC1343, SVL = 29 mm).

Identification.

Morphological characters of the specimens agreed well with the description by Berry (1975), Garg et al. (2019) and Sumarli et al. (2015). Size (SVL: 17-24 mm, n = 6 males; 25-29 mm, n = 3 females); rounded snouts, projecting beyond lower jaw; tympanum barely visible; supratympanic fold distinct; tips of digits dilated to form large disc bearing circum-marginal grooves; toes basally webbed; dorsum with pale coloured vertebral stripe, with black marks on each side, and dark stripe on lateral sides from tip of snout until groin; ventral surface of foot is dark brown.

Remarks.

Microhyla cf. heymonsi was commonly found beneath piles of leaf litter and in rock crevices throughout SLF. This species was also found to occur in similar man-made ponds as with other species of Microhyla . Active and loud calling could be heard from this species after rains. The species is considered a commensal species that is tolerant of habitat alteration ( Badli-Sham et al. 2019).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Anura

Family

Microhylidae

Genus

Microhyla