Hyperolius cf. inyangae Laurent, 1943

Conradie, Werner, Keates, Chad, Verburgt, Luke, Baptista, Ninda L. & Harvey, James, 2023, Contributions to the herpetofauna of the Angolan Okavango- Cuando-Zambezi river drainages. Part 3: Amphibians, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 325) 17 (1), pp. 19-56 : 32

publication ID

1525-9153

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/43578788-0030-3F5C-88A1-67BAFE1404A0

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Hyperolius cf. inyangae Laurent, 1943
status

 

Hyperolius cf. inyangae Laurent, 1943 View in CoL

Nyanga Reed Frog ( Fig. 14; Map 13)

Material (30 specimens): PEM A12730–3, INBAC: WC-4839; INBAC (no number x3), Cuando River source, -13.00346° 19.12751°, 1,353 m asl; PEM A14793– 803, INBAC: WC-7023, INBAC: WC-7025, Luio River camp floodplains, -13.19711° 20.22194°, 1,181 m asl; PEM A13741, Lungwebungu River campsite, -12.58319° 18.66570°, 1,284 m asl; PEM A14887–8, Luvu River camp, -13.71200° 21.83538°, 1,082 m asl; PEM A12858–9, Quembo River source lake, -13.13624° 19.04591°, 1,366 m asl; PEM A12500, PEM A12513, river crossing before Samboano Village, -12.30700° 18.62350°, 1,398 m asl; PEM A14892–3, wetland near old quarry east of Quemba, -12.16960° 18.22965°, 1,353 m asl. Additional material (1 specimen): P2- 274 (photograph and tissue sample), wetland near old quarry east of Quemba, -12.16960° 18.22965°, 1,353 m asl. Description: Small slender species of reed frog; very sharp snout with a small anterior protrusion, which extends well beyond the margin of the mouth; small black asperites on throat; pedal webbing formula: I (1), II i/e (1–0.75), III (1–0.75), IV (0.75–0.75), V (0.5). Dorsum lime green with white dorsolateral stripes; ventrum transparent; toe tips and webbing yellow. Adult females (n = 9) varied from 15.0–19.6 (16.7) mm (largest female: PEM A12500); adult males (n = 21) varied from 12.8–17.9 (15.1) mm (largest male: PEM A14893). Habitat and natural history notes: Found sympatric with Hyperolius nasutus at the Lungwebungu, Cuando, and Quembo rivers, where they were distinguished by microhabitat preference. Hyperolius cf. inyangae was found among vegetation associated with slow running water, while H. nasutus was found on margins of source lakes or flooded areas with larger bodies of open water. Comments: Bittencourt-Silva (2019) assigned a specimen from western Zambia to H. nasicus based on head shape and webbing, but mentioned that molecularly it is most like H. inyangae . The new material documented here is molecularly identical (16S rRNA: 97.5–100%) to the published sequences of H. inyangae (Channing et al. 2013; Bittencourt-Silva 2019) and agrees with the description, especially regarding the sharp snout usually with a pointed protrusion, but differs in the pedal webbing condition (Channing et al. 2013). It is reported to have reduced webbing and is illustrated as such, while the specimens here have more extensive webbing. This is either an error or there is a degree of variation in the webbing condition. The presence of this species so far to the west is an unexpected result, as H.inyangae is currently only known from the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe. These new records thus represent a range extension of over 1,500 km westward. Further phylogenetic work is underway to fully document the taxonomic status of this population and other species assigned to the H. nasutus or H. benguellensis complexes.

PEM

Port Elizabeth Museum

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Hyperoliidae

Genus

Hyperolius

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