Xenopus tropicalis (Gray, 1864)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11287122 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11287360 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EEFC14-FFAA-FFD4-FF7C-829CA57B7E9D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Xenopus tropicalis (Gray, 1864) |
status |
|
Xenopus tropicalis (Gray, 1864) View in CoL
Tropical Clawed Frog
Material: Two females, NGK-Nimba 0001 ( Fig. 13 A View Fig ), NGK-Nimba 0002, GoogleMaps and two males, NGK-Nimba 0003, NGK-Nimba 0006. GoogleMaps
Comments GoogleMaps : This GoogleMaps pipid lives in forests, degraded forests, and gallery forests in humid savannahs from Senegal to western Cameroon (Rödel 2000). The species was seen in flooded paddy fields in the Yéalé village (07°31.928’N, 008°25.401’W; 425 m asl). In the dry season, frogs were easily caught in patches of the same shallow swamps. Some juvenile frogs measured 21.5–30.0 mm (N = 5), adult males reached 32.4–42.5 mm (N = 5), and adult females ranged from 48.3–53.3 mm (N = 4).
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