Oreophryne anamiatoi, Kraus & Allison, 2009

Kraus, Fred & Allison, Allen, 2009, New microhylid Frogs from the Muller Range, Papua New Guinea, ZooKeys 26 (26), pp. 53-76 : 66-71

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.26.258

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:46085EC4-FB49-4272-803A-A0FF21EE52CD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3790426

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/29D10CFC-A8FB-431B-A61C-289B7619CF78

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:29D10CFC-A8FB-431B-A61C-289B7619CF78

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Oreophryne anamiatoi
status

sp. nov.

Oreophryne anamiatoi View in CoL sp. n.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:29D10CFC-A8FB-431B-A61C-289B7619CF78

Fig. 1C, D

Holotype. BPBM 33768 View Materials (field tag FK 12882 ), collected by F. Kraus and J. Anamiato, E slope Mt. Itukua , Muller Range, 5.66954° S, 142.62334° E, 2177 m, Southern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea, 27 March 2009. GoogleMaps

Paratypes (n = 20). BPBM 33763 View Materials , same data as holotype except collected 17 March GoogleMaps ; BPBM 33764 View Materials , same data as holotype except collected 22 March GoogleMaps ; PNGNM 24097 , same data as holotype except collected 25 March GoogleMaps ; BPBM 33765–66 View Materials , same data as holotype except collected 26 March GoogleMaps ; BPBM 33767 View Materials , same data as holotype GoogleMaps ; BPBM 33769–71 View Materials , same data as holotype except collected 28 March GoogleMaps ; PNGNM 24098 , same data as holotype except collected 29 March GoogleMaps ; BPBM 33772 View Materials , same data as holotype except collected 30 March GoogleMaps ; PNGNM 24099 , same data as holotype except collected 31 March GoogleMaps ; BPBM 33773–79 View Materials , PNGNM 24100 , Mt. Paramo , Muller Range, 5.64509° S, 142.63618° E, 1874 m, 3 April 2009 GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. A medium-sized species of Oreophryne (adult SV = 23.4–29.7 mm) distinguished by its combination of a cartilaginous connection of the procoracoid to the scapula, no webbing between the toes, fifth toe longer than the third, relatively short snout (EN/SV = 0.073 –0.086), dark face, venter with a dense array of darkbrown flecks, and call consisting of an extended multi-note chuckle or cackle.

Comparisons with other species. The new species differs from all Papuan congeners except O. alticola Zweifel, Cogger, and Richards , O. asplenicola Günther , O. brevicrus Zweifel , O. clamata Günther , O. crucifera (van Kampen) , O. flava Parker , O. habbemensis Zweifel, Cogger, and Richards , O. idenburgensis Zweifel , O. kampeni Parker , O. notata , O. pseudasplenicola Günther , and O. waira Günther in having (vs. lacking) a procoracoid that reaches the scapula. It differs from O. crucifera , O. idenburgensis , O. kampeni , and O. waira in lacking (vs. having) webbing between the toes; and it differs from O. alticola , O. brevicrus , O. clamata , and O. habbemensis in having the fifth toe longer than (vs. shorter than or subequal to) the third. Oreophryne anamiatoi differs from the remaining species O. asplenicola , O. flava , O. notata , and O. pseudasplenicola in its larger size (23.4–29.7 mm vs. maximum of 21 mm in those four species) in having a uniformly dark face, and in its call (call a series of peeps in the other species, but call unknown in O. flava ); it further differs from O. asplenicola and O. pseudasplenicola in its shorter snout (EN/SV> 0.086 in those species), from O. notata and O. pseudasplenicola in lacking (vs. having) an inverted white U on the face, and from O. flava in having an abdomen with dark-brown flecking (vs. immaculate yellow-white), and lacking (vs. having) a dark W-shaped mark between the shoulders.

Description of holotype. Adult female with incision on right side. Head wide (HW/SV = 0.40), with steep, slightly concave loreal region. Canthus rostralis round- ed, concave when viewed from above. Nostrils directed laterally, closer to tip of snout than to eyes. Internarial distance broader than distance from naris to eye (EN/IN = 0.80, IN/SV = 0.101, EN/SV = 0.081). Snout truncate when viewed from the side, shallowly angulate when viewed from above. Eyes moderately large (EY/SV = 0.11); eyelid approximately two-thirds width of interorbital distance. Tympanum distinct but small (TY/SV = 0.047). Dorsal skin granular with series of weakly raised parallel ridges and scattered small pustules; ventral surfaces coarsely granular. Supratympanic fold narrow. Fingers unwebbed, bearing discs with terminal grooves; relative lengths 3>4>2>1. Finger discs approximately 3 times widths of penultimate phalanges, except for first finger, which is approximately twice width of penultimate phalanx. Subarticular tubercles well developed; inner metacarpal tubercle oval and low; outer rounded and obscure. Toes unwebbed, bearing discs with terminal grooves; relative lengths 4>5>3>2>1. Toe discs smaller than those of fingers (3 rdF /4thT = 1.37), approximately twice width of penultimate phalanges. Subarticular tubercles low but distinct; inner metatarsal tubercle large, oval; outer absent. Hind legs of moderate length (TL/SV = 0.46).

In preservative, dorsum medium brown with small black flecks scattered throughout, these concentrated dorsolaterally, mid-dorsally, and on top of head. Entire face to posterior of jaw angle uniform dark brown. Dark-brown postocular stripe extends along ventral side of supratympanic ridge. Rear and front of thighs uniform medium brown. Tops of wrist, hand, and first three fingers boldly marked with dark brown. Sides darker brown with very pale straw flecks. Venter very pale straw with bold, large, dark-brown flecks, these dense on chin, throat, and under legs, sparse on abdomen. Palmar and plantar surfaces dark brown spotted with very pale straw. Iris dark brown minutely flecked with silver.

Variation. Mensural variation for the type series is shown in Table 5. Sexual dimorphism is slight except that females clearly attain larger size than males and may have slightly narrower snouts (reflected in EN/IN values).

Dorsal ground color varies from light brown to dark brown, and pattern varies from virtually absent to moderately well stippled and streaked with black. Black stippling may be uniformly distributed, or concentrated laterally or dorsolaterally. Two specimens have a narrow tan vertebral stripe margined with black stippling. The dark face and postocular bar are present in all. Venters of all specimens are boldly spotted with dark brown on white, but two specimens have the abdomen clear and a few others have it less spotted than the chin and throat.

Color in life. BPBM 33764 (Fig. 1C): “Dorsum medium brown with a slight russet cast. Face dark brown; short dark-brown postocular dash; and few dark-brown lateral flecks. Rear of thighs brown, slightly darker than dorsum. Venter pale yellow heavily flecked with dark gray. Iris bronze with narrow red rim around pupil. Upper arms and tarsi burnt orange.” BPBM 33765 was uniform brown dorsally with a dark face mask and postocular stripe (Fig. 1D); rear and front of thighs, and groin, uniform brown, slightly darker than dorsum; venter dirty cream flecked with gray; iris dark brown. BPBM 33766 had black flecks on sides and venter brighter yellow but with fewer gray flecks and with white chromatophores; BPBM 33767 had the dorsum and rear of thighs burnt orange and venter pale yellow; BPBM 33769 and 33771 had a tan vertebral line. BPBM 33774 had a metallic green sheen on eyelids and top of snout; BPBM 33776 same but less extensive. PNGNM 24097 was light brown with straw yellow on sides, with dark-brown spots dorsally and laterally, denser on sides; face to rictus and short postocular stripe dark brown; rear of thighs brown like dorsum but unspotted; venter pale yellow spotted with dark-gray flecks; iris brown.

Call. Animals called during the first few hours of darkness. We recorded ten calls from two individuals ( Table 6). Th e calls from both were similar, so we combined data from both for analysis.

The call consists of 17–22 pulsed notes ( Figs. 8A View Figure 8 , 9A View Figure 9 ). Note duration was similar over the course of the call and averaged 0.0569 s (range 0.0266 –0.0681). Internote intervals were also similar throughout the call and were similar in duration to the notes, averaging 0.0563 s (range 0.0390 –0.0942). Mean call duration was 2.10s (range 1.77–2.33), and notes were delivered at a mean repetition rate of 18.5 notes/s (range 17.3–20.3). Number of pulses/note ranged from 3–11 ( Fig. 9A View Figure 9 ), with a strong tendency to decrease over the course of the call (Fig 10). Modal number of pulses in the first three notes in each call ranged from 10–11, producing a mean rate for those notes of 200.9 pulses/s, while modal number of pulses in the last three notes ranged from 7–9, producing a mean rate for those notes of 146.4 pulses/s ( Table 7). Notes are finely tuned, with a mean dominant frequency of 2490

0.5 ļ.0 ļ.5 2.0 2.5

Time (s)

0.05 0.ļ0 0.ļ5 0.20 0.25 0.30

Time (s)

Hz (range 2460–2540) ( Fig. 8 View Figure 8 B–C, 9B–C) and no frequency modulation over the duration of the note.

Etymology. The species is named for Jim Anamiato of the Papua New Guinea National Museum for his considerable assistance on several of our expeditions, including the one during which this frog was discovered.

Range. Known only from the vicinity of the type locality on the northeastern slopes of the Muller Range, Southern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ).

Ecological notes. Animals inhabited both primary and secondary rainforest at elevations ranging from 1870–2180 m. Most animals were found in the immediate vicinity of stream banks, but a few were found several meters away in adjacent forest. Males called from dense moss mats on standing or fallen trees from 1–5 m above the ground,

2 4 6 8 ļ0

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Microhylidae

Genus

Oreophryne

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