Petropedetes juliawurstnerae, Barej, Michael F., Rödel, Mark-Oliver, Gonwouo, Legrand Nono, Pauwels, Olivier S. G., Böhme, Wolfgang & Schmitz, Andreas, 2010

Barej, Michael F., Rödel, Mark-Oliver, Gonwouo, Legrand Nono, Pauwels, Olivier S. G., Böhme, Wolfgang & Schmitz, Andreas, 2010, Review of the genus Petropedetes Reichenow, 1874 in Central Africa with the description of three new species (Amphibia: Anura: Petropedetidae), Zootaxa 2340, pp. 1-49 : 35-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.193288

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6199598

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B479090F-FFED-FFB0-D7B4-FA2343A60AD7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Petropedetes juliawurstnerae
status

sp. nov.

Petropedetes juliawurstnerae View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs. 4 View FIGURE 4 , 6 View FIGURE 6 c, 7d, 8c, 9c, 10b, 14, 15

Holotype. ZFMK 67360 (adult male), Cameroon, Mt. Kupe: Nyasoso, 4°49’42N, 9°40’55E, app. 920 m a.s.l., 19.XII.1997, coll. O. Euskirchen.

Paratypes. IRSNB-KBIN 1989 (female), IRSNB-KBIN 1990 (male), Cameroon, Mt. Kupe, Nyasoso app. 950 m a.s.l., 4°49’42N, 9°40’55E, 6.VII.2009, coll. A Schmitz & M.F. Barej; MHNG 2713.12 (male), 5.VII.2009, other data as IRSNB-KBIN 1989; MHNG 2713.13 (female), same data as IRSNB-KBIN 1989); ZFMK 67357 (female), 2.I.1998, other data as holotype; ZFMK 67359 (female), 67987-990, 68170 (4 males), Cameroon, Mt. Kupe, NW-slope, app. 910 m a.s.l., 18.XII.1997 - 3.I.1998, coll. A. Schmitz; ZFMK 68131 (male), 68134-136 (3 females), app. 950 m a.s.l., other data as ZFMK 67987; ZFMK 75590 (female), 75591 (male), Cameroon, Mt. Kupe: Nyasoso, 4°49’42N, 9°40’55E, 15.I.2000, coll. H.-W. Herrmann & A. Schmitz; ZFMK 88866 (female), data as IRSNB-KBIN 1989; ZMB 73694 (male), ZMB (73695) (female), data as IRSNB-KBIN 1989.

Additional material. ZFMK 67355 (male), Cameroon, Bakossi Mts., Meked, app. 625 m a.s.l., no date, coll. O. Euskirchen.

Diagnosis. Medium sized Petropedetes ; slender body shape; tympanum round and distinct, smaller than eye diameter; characters of breeding males: tympanic papilla present, situated in the centre of the tympanum; forearm hypertrophy only weakly developed; carpal spike present; femoral glands long and narrow, not round; a typical dorsal marking of light spots in the form of a flower with five petals recognizable in many specimens ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 ); webbing moderate: 1 (0) 2 (0-0) 3 (1-1) 4 (2-2) 5 (0.5) ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 b).

Description of the holotype. The holotype is an adult male with a slender body shape; 32.7 mm SUL; snout in lateral view rounded; head width 13.8 mm; eye diameter 4.8 mm; interorbital distance 3.2 mm; naris closer to snout (1.9 mm) than to eye (3.2 mm); canthus rostralis distinct but rounded; loreal region deeply concave; throat without spinosities ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 c); femur length 18.1 mm; tibia length 19.8 mm; foot (incl. longest toe) 24.4 mm; femoral glands large, long and narrow (length x width: 6.8 x 1.9 mm / 6.6 x 2.0 mm); relation femoral gland length to femur length 0.37; spinosity hardly developed on upper forearms; webbing of feet: 1 (0) 2 (0-0) 3 (1-0.5) 4 (2-2) 5 (0.5); coloration in preservation: overall colour brown-grey; white marking in shape of a 5-petal flower (indistinct); white warts on flanks, hind limbs and abdomen; upper hind limbs with white transversal bars, continuing on lower legs; ventral side whitish and pale, throat of same coloration with minuscule darker pigmented points; ventral surfaces of femora whitish with darker marbling, which covers in parts the femoral glands; lower leg ventrally with little marbling.

Variation. Medium sized Petropedetes with slender body; females being slightly larger (SUL in males: 29.5–38.9 mm, in females: 39.1–42.6 mm); mean head width in males 40% of SUL in females 39%; snout in lateral view rounded; canthus rostralis distinct but rounded; loreal region deeply concave; eye diameter about 1.8 times eye-narial distance; nose closer to snout tip than eye; distinct round tympanum, smaller than eye in both sexes (tympanum / eye in males: 0.66–0.8%, in females: 0.47–0.60); slender tympanic papilla situated in centre of tympanum ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 c); supratympanic fold distinct; fingers slender, with typically T-shaped fingertips; relative length of fingers: III> IV> II> I; manual subarticular tubercles single; manual webbing absent; palmar tubercle and thenar tubercle present, palmar tubercle sometimes indistinct; forearm hypertrophy weakly developed in males; carpal spike present in males (well visible on X-rays; Fig. 15 View FIGURE 15 ); spinosities in males weakly developed on upper forearms; dorsal skin heterogeneous with larger warts on flanks; dorsum with prolonged warts, less distinctly developed than in other species; ventral skin smooth; mean femur length in males 54% of SUL, in females 52%, mean tibia length in males 60% of SUL, in females 57%; mean foot length in males 76% of SUL, in females 75%; upper hind limbs of moderate size, lower hind limbs slender; femoral glands line-shaped, long and narrow, of almost similar length in both sexes (femoral gland / femur length in males: 0.36–0.51, in females: 0.32–0.41); relative length of toes: IV> III> V> II> I; half-webbed species, different webbing usually 3 (1-1), sometimes 3 (0.5-0) running along the 3rd toe, 4 (1.5-1.5) up to 4 (2-2) and 5 (0) or 5 (0.5); webbing of ZFMK 68170 (paratype) 1 (0) 2 (0-0) 3 (1-0) 4 (2-2) 5 (0).

Females of P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. possess long femoral glands, which may make sex determination difficult. Females are best recognizable by their smaller tympana and more slender femoral glands ( Fig. 9 View FIGURE 9 c).

Coloration. Dorsum brown with large greenish spots on head, or back dark brown without lighter spots, only light warts ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 c); iris golden; flanks with white warts; legs coloured as dorsum with greenish transversal bars; femoral glands pale orange or brownish; coloration in preservation: dorsum predominantly uniform grey or brown with few light, small spots; typical pattern of pale spots, resembling a flower with five petals, in most specimens recognizable; legs with thin white transverse lines.

Natural history. The species has been found at a water reservoir and close to small, fast flowing creeks at Mt. Kupe. The streambed was stony and the surrounding vegetation was a transition between primary and secondary rainforest. The frogs were sitting on slippery stones, overgrown by algae, or in the riverine vegetation at heights of 10–20 cm. On Mt. Kupe P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. occurs in syntopy with P. euskircheni sp. nov.

Distribution. At present the species is only known from its type locality at Mt. Kupe and Meked on the adjacent Bakossi Mountains ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ).

Genetics. The genetic comparison for the uncorrected p-distances of the mitochondrial 16S rRNAfragment (Table 4) gave the following results for Petropedetes juliawurstnerae sp. nov.: interspecific comparison between P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. and all other Central African Petropedetes taxa ranged between 2.84%-12.39%, while the intraspecific variation within P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. was much lower at 0.00%-0.90% (N= 5). The lowest interspecific difference has been detected between P. p e r re t i and P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. ranging between 2.84%-3.59%, but species can be clearly differentiated on the morphological basis alone (see below).

Systematic remarks. Mostly closely P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. resembles P. p e r re t i and P. cameronensis . It shares a tympanic papilla in the centre of the tympanum and a similar shape with P. perreti ( Figs. 8 View FIGURE 8 a, 8c), and similar webbing with P. cameronensis ( Figs. 10 View FIGURE 10 b, 10c). From the other species P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. is distinctly different by its half-webbed toes; i.e. fully webbed in P. palmipes (additionally lacking the tympanal papilla) and rudimentary-webbed in P. euskircheni sp. nov., P. johnstoni , P. parkeri , and P. vulpiae sp. nov. Breeding males of P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. can be distinguished from other species with a tympanic papilla by the position of the papilla. Only P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. and P. perreti have papillae in the centre of the tympanum. In all other species this papilla is positioned closer to the dorsal edge of the tympanum. The papilla of P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. is broad at the end, when not shrivelled after preservation.

From the most similar two species, P. p e r re t i and P. cameronensis , P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. can be distinguished by the following characters: P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. is smaller than P. p e r re t i (SUL in males: N juliawurstnerae = 12, N perreti = 13, p <0.001; in females: N juliawurstnerae = 10, N perreti = 15, p <0.01). The tympanum diameter / eye diameter ratio is smaller in male P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. (tympanum diameter / eye diameter in males: N juliawurstnerae = 12, N perreti = 13, p <0.001), but does not differ significantly in females (p = 0.23). The webbing is less developed than in P. p e r re t i ( Figs. 10 View FIGURE 10 a, 10b): 1) webbing deeper notched in P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov., 2) webbing always less developed on the fourth toe, where it usually leaves 1.5–2 phalanges free in P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov.; but only 0 or 1 free phalange in P. perreti . The femoral gland of P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. is long and narrow (stripe-like) in males and females. The femoral glands of P. perreti are more oval. The gland length / gland width ratio in P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. is significantly larger (gland length / gland width in males: N juliawurstnerae = 12, N perreti = 13, p <0.001; in females: N juliawurstnerae = 10, N perreti = 15, p <0.001).

In contrast, P. c a m e ro n e n s i s and P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. do not differ in their size (males p= 0.19; females p =0.29). Petropedetes juliawurstnerae sp. nov. can be distinguished from P. cameronensis by the size of the tympanum which is distinct in P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov., but only rudimentary or even indistinctly developed in P. cameronensis (tympanum diameter / eye diameter in males: N juliawurstnerae = 12, N cameronensis = 16, p <0.001; in females: N juliawurstnerae = 10, N cameronensis = 17, p <0.001). P. c a m e ro n e n s i s males lack the tympanic papillae present in breeding P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. males. Especially in females, which do not carry a tympanic papilla, the similar webbing makes it difficult distinguishing the new species from P. cameronensis . In this case the shape of the femoral gland is the character best suited for species identification. The femoral glands are oval shaped in P. cameronensis ; the gland length / gland width ratio in P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. is significantly larger (gland length / gland width in males: N juliawurstnerae = 12, N cameronensis = 16, p <0.001; in females: N juliawurstnerae = 10, N cameronensis = 17, p <0.001).

Spinosities in examined specimens of P. juliawurstnerae sp. nov. seem not to be fully developed, therefore spines could be developed on the throat and more developed on upper forelimbs as well, as in other species ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 c).

Etymology. The specific epithet juliawurstnerae is a matronym. The name is dedicated to Mrs. Julia Anna Maria Wurstner (Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany), who accompanied the senior author during fieldwork in 2007 and supported his work from the beginning.

ZFMK

Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig

MHNG

Museum d'Histoire Naturelle

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Petropedetidae

Genus

Petropedetes

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