Odontobatrachus arndti Barej, Schmitz, Penner, Doumbia, Sandberger-Loua, Emmrich, Adeba, and Rödel, 2015
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11287122 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11287314 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EEFC14-FFAE-FFD0-FCE6-879FA0DD7D1D |
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Felipe |
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Odontobatrachus arndti Barej, Schmitz, Penner, Doumbia, Sandberger-Loua, Emmrich, Adeba, and Rödel, 2015 |
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Odontobatrachus arndti Barej, Schmitz, Penner, Doumbia, Sandberger-Loua, Emmrich, Adeba, and Rödel, 2015 View in CoL
Arndt’s Toothed Frog
Material: Three females, NGK-Nimba 0244 , NGK-Nimba 0245 , NGK-Nimba 0246 , and two males, NGK-Nimba 0247 ( Fig. 11A View Fig ), NGK-Nimba 0248 .
Comments: Odontobatrachus arndti is a torrent-frog living in primary and slightly degraded forests, known from Mount Sangbé and Mounts Nimba ( Barej et al. 2015; Channing and Rödel 2019). We found a few populations of O. arndti along cascades of streams in forested ravines edged by savannah (07°35.233’N, 008°25.190’W; 847 m asl). These frogs were found to be very abundant along a very torrent stream (07°34.652’N, 008°24.966’W; 716 m asl). In a lower part of the forest, an additional site was along a wide torrent stream with a gravel bottom and blocks of granite rock (07°33.121’N, 008°25.036’W; 422 m asl). The recorded males exhibited huge bright orange femoral glands. They measured 45.1‒52.5 mm (N = 8); the female SUL ranged from 43.5‒60.5 mm (N = 10), thus the sizes of both sexes are within the known range of the species ( Barej et al. 2015). At all sites, the majority of frogs were close to the rocky streams, however, a few females perched on trees close to the streams. These records are the second for Ivory Coast.
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