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Back from the deaf: integrative taxonomy revalidates an earless and mute species, Hylodes grandoculis van Lidth de Jeude, 1904, and confirms a new species of Pristimantis Jiménez de la Espada, 1870 (Anura: Strabomantidae) from the Eastern Guiana Shield
Many anuran species remain to be formally named and described in Amazonia, notably in the Guiana Shield, and particularly in megadiverse groups such as Pristimantis . Several species in the Guiana Shield region have been confused with Pristimantis marmoratus and P. ockendeni . Hylodes grandoculis ,...
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Published in: | Organisms diversity & evolution 2022-12, Vol.22 (4), p.1065-1098 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Many anuran species remain to be formally named and described in Amazonia, notably in the Guiana Shield, and particularly in megadiverse groups such as
Pristimantis
. Several species in the Guiana Shield region have been confused with
Pristimantis marmoratus
and
P. ockendeni
.
Hylodes grandoculis
, a taxon previously placed in the synonymy of
P. marmoratus
, may be available for one of these species. To disentangle this confusing situation, we examined the external morphology and osteology (via µ-CT scans) of the holotype of
H. grandoculis
, the holotype of
Pristimantis marmoratus
, and of recently collected material for which we also analyzed molecular, acoustic, and morphological variation. We concluded that some populations from Suriname and northern Pará, Brazil, are distinct from
P. marmoratus
and correspond to
Pristimantis grandoculis
. Other populations, from French Guiana, are closely related to
P. grandoculis
but their status remains ambiguous. Finally, some populations, from French Guiana and Amapá, Brazil, are conspicuously distinct from both
P. marmoratus
and
P. grandoculis
and are described herein as
P. crepitaculus
sp. nov. A third species, belonging to a “trans-amazon complex”, occurs in southern Suriname, Guyana, and Brazil and remains undescribed.
Pristimantis grandoculis
and related populations from French Guiana lack external tympanum, columella, pharyngeal ostia, vocal slits and do not vocalize. This represents a rare, perhaps unique, example of a deaf and mute species of frogs from the Amazonian lowlands. |
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ISSN: | 1439-6092 1618-1077 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13127-022-00564-w |