Amolops putaoensis Gan, Qin, Lwin, Li, Quan, Liu & Yu, 2020

Zhang, Yin-Peng, Liu, Xiao-Long, Stuart, Bryan L., Wu, Dong-Yi, Wang, Yu-Fan, Che, Jing & Yuan, Zhi-Yong, 2022, Amolops putaoensis Gan, Qin, Lwin, Li, Quan, Liu & Yu, 2020, a newly recorded torrent frog for China, Herpetozoa 35, pp. 231-237 : 231

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/herpetozoa.35.e94745

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ACADB95E-81F3-45C7-B520-40A99A7310D1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/33BECA8B-C632-5107-A851-FF286F15C9D0

treatment provided by

Herpetozoa by Pensoft

scientific name

Amolops putaoensis Gan, Qin, Lwin, Li, Quan, Liu & Yu, 2020
status

 

Amolops putaoensis Gan, Qin, Lwin, Li, Quan, Liu & Yu, 2020

Fig. 2 View Figure 2

Specimens examined

(n = 10 adult males). KIZ 035035-035044 (Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ), collected from Dulongjiang Village , Gongshan County, Yunnan Province, China (27.66995°N, 98.26822°E, 1218 m elev.) by Yu-Fan Wang, Xiao-Long Liu and Zhi-Yong Yuan on 4 July 2019 GoogleMaps .

Expanded diagnosis.

A member of the A. monticola group having males (n = 13) with side of head dark with light-colored upper lip stripe extending to axilla; distinct dorsolateral fold; weak to moderately developed supratympanic fold; no outer metatarsal tubercle; circummarginal groove on tip of first finger; SVL 37.6-51.3 mm; head length slightly short or subequal to head width, with HDL: HDW 0.87-1.02; smooth dorsal skin, with dense, tiny dermal granules distributed from posterior margin of nostril to cloaca; tympanum diameter less than half of eye diameter; distinct transverse bands on dorsal surfaces of limbs; venter greyish white, with irregular spots from throat to mid-belly; visible pineal body; vomerine teeth; nuptial pads; external subgular vocal sacs; and maxillary gland.

Expanded description.

In life, dorsum with smooth skin; dorsum colored in brown with black irregular spots from snout to vent; lateral region lemon yellow to olive green, dorsal and lateral coloration divided by a distinct dorsolateral gland extending from posterior margin of eye to near vent; tiny dermal granules extending from posterior margin of nostrils and eyelid to near vent, absent from lateral and ventral regions of body; tarsal and skin folds absent; venter greyish white, with irregular spots from throat to chest. In preservative (75% ethanol), dorsal coloration faded to dark bluish-green and ventral coloration to creamy yellow.

Expanded variation.

In life, dorsal coloration varied from yellowish brown to dark brown; lateral coloration varied from lemon yellow to olive green; irregular spots on flank rather distinct or weak; number of transverse bands on forearm ranged from 4-8; and number of transverse bands on tibia ranged from 6-7 (Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ).

Expanded comparisons.

Gan et al. (2020) did not compare A. putaoensis with the closely related A. kohimaensis (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ) and only distinguished A. putaoensis from A. aniqiaoensis on the basis of male body size, a character that does not hold up with the addition of the Gongshan specimens. Its other two relatives, A. monticola and A. adicola (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ), were poorly known or undescribed, respectively, at the time of the description of A. putaoensis . With the addition of the Gongshan specimens, A. putaoensis can be distinguished from A. kohimaensis by lacking an outer metatarsal tubercle (vs. present); and having distinct dorsolateral folds (vs. absent). Amolops putaoensis can be distinguished from A. aniqiaoensis by having distinct transverse bands on dorsal surfaces of limbs (vs. absent or indistinct patterns); and lacking a "/ \"-shaped mark on chest (vs. present). Amolops putaoensis can be distinguished from A. monticola by lacking an outer metatarsal tubercle (vs. present); and having circummarginal grooves on finger Ⅰ (vs. absent). Amolops putaoensis can be distinguished from A. adicola by having distinct transverse bands on dorsal surfaces of limbs (vs. reticulation); and having ventral spots from throat to mid-belly (vs. absent).

Expanded distribution.

Amolops putaoensis is known only from its type locality in Putao County, Kachin State, northern Myanmar, and from our newly recorded locality in Dulongjiang Village, Gongshan County, Yunnan Province, China, approximately 133.7 km northeast of the type locality.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Ranidae

Genus

Amolops