Brachycephalus pulex, Napoli, Marcelo Felgueiras, Caramaschi, Ulisses, Cruz, Carlos Alberto Gonçalves & Dias, Iuri Ribeiro, 2011

Napoli, Marcelo Felgueiras, Caramaschi, Ulisses, Cruz, Carlos Alberto Gonçalves & Dias, Iuri Ribeiro, 2011, A new species of flea-toad, genus Brachycephalus Fitzinger (Amphibia: Anura: Brachycephalidae), from the Atlantic rainforest of southern Bahia, Brazil, Zootaxa 2739, pp. 33-40 : 34-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.276578

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671000

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/537B87F7-FFD2-FF93-FF53-FAAFFC88FC3B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Brachycephalus pulex
status

sp. nov.

Brachycephalus pulex View in CoL sp. nov.

Figures 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3

Holotype. MNRJ 69646 (ex-UESC 8357), adult specimen, collected at the Serra Bonita mountain (15o23'S, 39o33'W, 830 m above sea level), Municipality of Camacan, State of Bahia, Brazil, on 0 4 July 2010, by I.R. Dias.

Paratopotypes. MZUESC 8352, adult specimen, collected on 25 March 2010, by I.R. Dias. MZUESC 8604– 8605, adult specimens, collected on 26 July 2010, by I.R. Dias. UFBA 10415–10416, juveniles, collected on 16 April 2009, by M.F Napoli and A. Y.C. Vargas. UFBA 10455, sub-adult, collected on 11 September 2010, by I.R. Dias.

Diagnosis. The new species is promptly included in the genus Brachycephalus by the small body size (snout– vent length less than 18 mm), reduced number of toes, terminal digits not expanded, toes without circumferential grooves, and digits apically pointed. Brachycephalus pulex is diagnosed from all its congeners by the combination of the following character states: (1) toe II externally absent; (2) toe V vestigial; (3) fingers I and IV externally absent; (4) body leptodactyliform; (5) small body size (adult specimens SVL 8.0– 8.4 mm); (6) dorsal ground color maculated with variegated browns without yellow or orange vivid colors; (7) dorsum with a x-shaped mark from posterior corners of eyes to sacral region; (8) an inverted depigmented v-shaped mark on chest, bordered above by a dark brown stripe on each side; (9) smooth skin texture with no dermal co-ossification on top of the head and central part of the back body.

Comparisons with other species. Brachycephalus pulex is closely allied to B. didactylus and B. hermogenesi by the small body size (combined SVL of B. didactylus and B. hermogenesi 8.6–10.2 mm; B. pulex 8.0– 8.4 mm), body leptodactyliform, dorsal ground color maculated with variegated browns without yellow or orange vivid colors, a dark brown x-shaped mark on dorsum, and short and pointed snout with a rounded tip in dorsal view. These features promptly diagnose B. pulex from B. alipioi , B. atelopoide , B. brunneus , B. bufonoides , B. ephippium , B. ferruginus , B. garbeana , B. izecksohni , B. nodoterga , B. pernix , B. pitanga , B. pombali , and B. vertebralis , which have body size larger (combined SVL 9.3–19.7 mm), body bufoniform, general body color vivid yellow to orange in life and pale cream in preservative (dorsal background color in B. brunneus brown, but not variegated), and rounded or mucronate snout shape in dorsal view. Brachycephalus pulex has smooth skin texture with no dermal co-ossification on top of the head and central part of the back body, whereas B. ephippium , B. nodoterga , and B. vertebralis have such characters. The toe II externally absent diagnoses B. pulex from all congeners, in which toe II is developed. Also, an only vestigial toe V diagnoses B. pulex from B. hermogenesi , which presents a small, but developed, toe V. The external absence of fingers I and IV diagnoses B. pulex from B. didactylus and B. hermogenesi , in which such fingers are vestigial. An inverted depigmented v-shaped mark on chest bordered above by a dark brown stripe on each side diagnoses B. pulex from B. didactylus , which has a dark brown trapezoidal mark on chest, and from B. hermogenesi (without dark brown marks on chest).

Description of holotype. Body slender, leptodactyliform ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Head wider than long, its length 38% of snout–vent length; snout long with length almost equal to eye diameter, rounded in lateral and dorsal views ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A–B); nostrils directed anterolateraly, elliptical, elongated, almost perpendicular to the canthus rostralis; canthus rostralis rounded; loreal region weakly concave; lips nearly sigmoid; eye slightly protruding in dorsal and lateral views, eye diameter 42% of head length; tympanum indistinct; vocal sac indistinct and vocal slits absent; tongue longer than wide, free behind; choanae relatively small, rounded; vomerine odontophores absent. Upper arm and forearm relatively slender, upper arm approximately as long as forearm; fingers I and IV absent; finger II distinct, short; finger III long, robust; tip of finger II nearly rounded, tip of finger III pointed; relative lengths of fingers II <III; no webs or disks on fingers or toes; subarticular tubercles and inner and outer metacarpal tubercles absent ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C). Legs relatively short, thigh robust; thigh length 50% of SVL, tibia length 88% of thigh length; toes I, II and V externally absent, toe III robust, short; toe IV robust, long; relative lengths of toes III <IV; subarticular tubercles and inner metatarsal tubercles absent; outer metatarsal tubercle vestigial ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D). Skin on top of the body surfaces smooth and with no dermal co-ossification ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 A). Measurements of holotype are in Table 1 View TABLE 1 .

Color of holotype. In preservative (70% ethyl alcohol), dorsal surfaces light brown, darkened by numerous brown pin dots; eyeball blackish brown; dorsum maculated by dark brown marks: a thin and medially interrupted interorbital stripe, a x-shaped mark from posterior corners of eyes to sacral region, somewhat dimmed in its ends, and an inverted v-shaped mark from sacrum to vent, continuous with the x-shaped mark. Forearms with scattered dark brown blotches somewhat anastomosed, absent on upper arms; outer edges of fingers II and III dark brown.

Groin with a dark brown blotch, continuous with a dark brown diagonal transverse large stripe on thigh; knee dark brown; posterior surfaces of thighs with a continuous and curved dark brown stripe just below the vent; tibia with two dark brown stripes cranially, and a third one over the heel; foot with five small dark brown blotches from tarsus to fourth toe. Background color of ventral surfaces pale cream, darkened by numerous brown pin dots; chest with an inverted depigmented v-shaped mark bordered above by two dark brown stripes on each side; edges of throat and belly delimited by distinct depigmented circular areas, also scattered on the inferior surfaces of thighs and tarsus. Palm of hand and sole of foot widely depigmented.

Color in life. Description based in the paratype MZUESC 8604. Dorsal ground color maculated with variegated browns looking like dead leaves ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). A dark brown x-shaped mark is discernible over the dorsum, anastomosed caudally with a dark brown v-shaped mark over the sacrum, which in turn is continuous with dark brown stripes over the thighs, tibia and tarsus. Dorsal ground color surfaces anterior and posterior to the x-shaped mark, reddish brown. Loreal region, flanks, concealed surfaces of thighs, and anterior surface of tibia, faded reddish brown. A light brown v-shaped interorbital area is delimited on the head cranially and caudally by two dark brown stripes, the former narrower than second. A dark brown mid-dorsal stripe extends perpendicularly from the cranial v-shaped stripe to near the tip of snout, which in turn presents the same background color of the v-shaped interorbital area. Tarsus and posterior surface of tibia light brown. Ventral surfaces dark brown ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ), with an inverted blackish brown v-shaped mark on chest, and white blotches bordering the throat, belly, thighs, and tibia. An xshaped mark is outlined from the groin to the posterior undersurface of thighs by a row of white botches bordered externally by a blackish stripe. From the groin, these white blotches extend cranially to the posterior margins of chest, bordering the belly. Pupil black, iris orange.

Variation. Specimens are congruent with respect to the external morphologic characters and color pattern. Snout-vent lengths of juveniles are 5.5 mm (UFBA 10415) and 6.8 mm (UFBA 10416); sub-adult UFBA 10455 is 7.4 mm. Measurements of adult paratopotypes are in Table 1 View TABLE 1 .

Etymology. The specific name ( pulex ), a noun in apposition, refers to the flea, Pulex irritans, and is allusive to the small size and to the striking capacity for large leaps presented by the new species.

Geographic distribution and Natural History. Brachycephalus pulex is only known from the type locality, a forest remnant located in a mountain range regionally named Serra Bonita, with elevations ranging from 200 to 950 m above sea level, which leads to altitudinal changes in the vegetation, from evergreen forest with elements of moist lowland semi-deciduous forest, to moist submontane forest near the summits. The Serra Bonita mountain range lies in the municipalities of Camacan and Pau Brasil, in the State of Bahia, Brazil, and is one of the last remnants of moist submontane forest in the region. It covers an area of approximately 7,500 hectares, 130 km from the city of Ilhéus on the Atlantic coast and 526 km from the State capital of Salvador. Approximately 50 % of the land cover is primary forest, and the remaining is a mosaic of forests in advanced stages of recuperation mixed with ‘cabruca’ (cocoa trees planted under natural forest canopy) and small areas of pasture. In the Serra Bonita there are several springs that provide fresh water for the inhabitants of Camacan and Pau Brasil. Brachycephalus pulex was captured within the Serra Bonita Reserve Complex (SBR), a Private Natural Heritage Reserve (RPPN), which comprises ca. 1,800 hectares of a “consortium” of privately owned properties (Instituto Uiraçu 2009). This is the first record of a Brachycephalus for the State of Bahia and the northernmost record for the coastal Atlantic Forest (but see below).

The new species was captured in a primary forest remnant provided with streams near the top of the mountain (800–930 m a.s.l.), within an area of dense leaf litter and several epiphytic bromeliads. At the time of specimens capture (December 2009 to July 2010), the minimum mean air temperature was 16.9 ºC (12–20 ºC), the maximum 23.9 ºC (20–28 ºC), and the average monthly precipitation was 188.6 mm (22.5–315 mm). The specimens were captured beneath the leaf litter, except by one individual that was on a tree trunk 30 cm above the ground. One specimen when disturbed during the survey of anurans jumped away many times quickly and stopped over a dry leaf, remaining immovable (deaf feigning) even after we raise the leaf. This behavior was also observed for both juvenile paratypes. No vocalization was heard, although the advertisement call of the closely allied B. hermogenesi has been recorded and described by Verdade et al. (2008), and also for B. ephippium ( Pombal et al. 1994) .

Remarks. The northern geographic distribution limit of the genus Brachycephalus deserves some considerations. Hedges et al. (2008) stated that the genus Brachycephalus is restricted to the Atlantic Coastal Forest in the states of Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, and Paraná in southeastern Brazil. In the same article, the authors provided a map with the geographic distribution of the genera Brachycephalus and Ischnocnema , in which the range distribution of the former extends to near the Brazilian State of Alagoas (ca. 10o S). This mapped geographic distribution is contradictory to the information presented in the article itself and is not congruent with the literature, as the northernmost geographic distribution limit known for the genus Brachycephalus is that of B. alipioi in the municipalities of Vargem Alta, Forno Grande and Santa Teresa (ca. 20o S), all in the State of Espírito Santo, Brazil ( Pombal & Gasparini 2006), and that of B. ephippium in the Serra do Brigadeiro (ca. 20o S) ( Pombal 2001; Dayrell et al. 2006), a regional designation of the Serra da Mantiqueira mountain range in the State of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Dayrell et al. (2006) and Frost (2010) included in the geographic distribution range of B. ephippium the State of Bahia, Brazil. Indeed, the type locality of B. ephippium lies in the Municipality of Ilhéus, State of Bahia (Bokermann 1966), but Pombal et al. (1998) and Pombal and Gasparini (2006) already contested this information pointing out that possibly Spix’s material was incorrectly labeled and the type locality is in error, as B. ephippium is common in the mountains of Rio de Janeiro city, where Spix also collected. In assuming this error in the label of Spix’s material, Pombal and Gasparini (2006) considered B. alipioi as the northernmost species of the genus. Therefore, the presence of B. pulex in the Municipality of Camacan (ca. 15o S), southern Bahia State, currently corresponds to the northernmost distribution limit of the genus Brachycephalus .

TABLE 1. Descriptive statistics of adult specimens of the type-series of Brachycephalus pulex sp. nov., from the Serra Bonita mountain (type locality), Municipality of Camacan, State of Bahia, Brazil. M ± SD, arithmetic mean ± standard deviation. Other abbreviations are defined in the text. Measurements are in millimeters.

  MNRJ 69646 (holotype) MZUESC 8352 (paratype) MZUESC 8604 (paratype) MZUESC 8605 (paratype) M ± SD
SVL 8.2 8.1 8.4 8.0 8.2 ± 0.1
HL 3.1 3.1 3.5 3.3 3.3 ± 0.2
HW 3.3 3.4 3.0 3.3 3.3 ± 0.2
ED 1.3 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.2 ± 0.1
END 0.4 0.4 0.6 0.6 0.5 ± 0.1
UEW 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.7 ± 0.1
IOD 1.4 0.8 1.2 1.5 1.2 ± 0.3
IND 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 ± 0.0
NSD 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.8 ± 0.0
THL 4.1 3.9 4.2 4.1 4.1 ± 0.1
TL 3.6 3.3 3.5 3.3 3.4 ± 0.1
FL 5.5 5.0 5.5 5.5 5.4 ± 0.2
MNRJ

Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro

MZUESC

Museu de Zoologia da Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Brachycephalidae

Genus

Brachycephalus

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