Oreobates ayacucho ( Lehr, 2007 ) Padial & Chaparro & Castroviejo-Fisher & Guayasamin & Lehr & Delgado & Vaira & Teixeira & Aguayo & Riva, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1206/3752.2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F70687B2-FFCF-8044-596D-FBFE6CB2FD80 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Oreobates ayacucho ( Lehr, 2007 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Oreobates ayacucho ( Lehr, 2007) View in CoL , new combination
Figure 5A–B
Phrynopus ayacucho: Lehr, 2007: 167 View in CoL .
Molecular analyses of the 16S rRNA gene fragment ( fig. 1 View FIG ), and additional analyses with larger character sampling (not shown), show that this species belongs to Oreobates View in CoL , formerly known only from one adult female specimen and a juvenile from Rapi, Provincia de la Mar, Departamento de Ayacucho, Peru ( Lehr, 2007) (map 2). Fieldwork in Ayacucho in 2008 added two adult males (MNCN 44484, SVL = 25.0; MHNC 6840, SVL = 19.0) and a juvenile (MNCN 44485, SVL = 13.0) of this species from a locality on the road from Punqui to Anco, 3 km before Anco (Departamento Ayacucho, Peru), at an elevation of 3850 m, 4.7 km from the type locality (map 2; see table 1 for coordinates). The specimens were readily identified as Phrynopus ayacucho View in CoL following Lehr (2007). Males of this species have nuptial pads and vocal slits, but vocal sac was not evident. In life, the dorsum and venter are dark brown. The dorsal skin has low, round warts and two rows of incomplete dorsolateral folds. The folds and some warts are almost black. The iris is almost black, with some golden reticulation.
Several males were heard calling during the day in cold grassland puna (or wet puna). Frogs where hidden under thick layers of moss near the ground or within piles of stones. We analyzed 11 calls from one male (MNCN 44484, SVL 25.0 mm). The call is composed of a FIG. 5. A–B. Adult male of Oreobates ayacucho from between Punki and Anco, 3850 m, Ayacucho, Peru (MNCN 44484, SVL 25.0); C–D. Adult female of Oreobates lehri from ca. 40 km from Vilcabamba, 2850 m, Cusco, Peru (MUSM 27616, SVL 28.0). E–F. Adult female of Oreobates lundbergi from between Auquimarca and Uchuerta, 2760 m, Pasco, Peru (MTD 45902, SVL 48.0). G–H. Adult female of Oreobates pereger from Yanamonte, 2600 m, Ayacucho, Peru (MUSM 19982, SVL 31.2).
group of 3–5 pulsed, amplitude-modulated notes with harmonic structure (fig. 6, table 2). Average call length was 756 ms, ranging from 691 to 756 ms. Call rate varied with motivation. When highly motivated, males called at a rate of 2.5–2.9 calls per minute. Most energy was distributed in a band from 1583 to 2703 Hz, with an average fundamental frequency of 1902 Hz (range = 1116–2370), and an average dominant frequency of 1560 Hz (range = 1178–2283), but with additional energy distributed in up to seven harmonics. The first note was always the longer (¯X = 248 ms, range = 218–303 ms), having 9–10 pulses (¯X = 10), and with the amplitude of pulses increasing toward the end of the notes, with a slow decay in the last pulses. Subsequent notes were always shorter, ranging from 85–116 ms, having only four pulses, and decreasing in amplitude toward the end of the note.
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Oreobates ayacucho ( Lehr, 2007 )
Padial, Jose M., Chaparro, Juan C., Castroviejo-Fisher, Santiago, Guayasamin, Juan M., Lehr, Edgar, Delgado, Amanda J., Vaira, Marcos, Teixeira, Mauro, Aguayo, Rodrigo & Riva, Ignacio De La 2012 |
Phrynopus ayacucho: Lehr, 2007: 167
Lehr, E. 2007: 167 |