Kalophrynus bunguranus ( Günther, 1895 ) Natuna Sticky Frog

Zug, George R., 2015, Morphology and Systematics of Kalophrynus interlineatus-pleurostigma Populations (Anura: Microhylidae: Kalophryninae) and a Taxonomy of the Genus Kalophrynus Tschudi, Asian Sticky Frogs, Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 62 (5), pp. 135-190 : 156

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11512244

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AD651C54-BC39-4A21-A0CA-3B9B8309A0BB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12726984

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03856357-CC42-FFE4-FFD0-5E99FC8D67A1

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Kalophrynus bunguranus ( Günther, 1895 ) Natuna Sticky Frog
status

 

Kalophrynus bunguranus ( Günther, 1895) Natuna Sticky Frog View in CoL

Diplopelma bunguranum Günther, 1895 View in CoL , Novitates Zoologicae 2:501 [type locality: “Bunguran, or Great Natuna [ Island]”, Indonesia].

TYPE MATERIAL.— SYNTYPES: number and deposition not noted in original publication, presumably BMNH; British Museum of Natural History 1947.2.11. 38–41 (formerly 95.5.1.105–108) according to R. F. Inger (in Frost, 1985) .

DEFINITION.— Small, adult females 25–27 mm SVL, adult males 22–23 mm SVL; head medium length 28 % HeadL/ SVL; head slightly wider than long 113 % HeadW/HeadL; naris closer to snout than to eye NA % NarEye/SnEye; eye moderately large 45 % EyeD/HeadL; tympanum visible and smaller than eye 61 % Tymp/EyeD; slender moderately long forelimb 29–31 % Forarm/ SVL and forearm to crus length NA % Forarm/CrusL; hindlimb moderately long HndlL/ SVL, NA % CrusL/ SVL, and NA % CrusL/ThghL; hindfoot well developed 85 % HndfL/CrusL.

Vomerine teeth presences or absence not reported; palatal fold morphology not reported; tongue large, subelliptical and entire behind.

Fingers without web; lengths 3>2≈1>4 (nub-like); tips rounded; subarticular tubercles not reported; palmar tubercle not repored; spiny nuptial excrescences dorsally on base of fingers 1 to 3 and adjacent hand of males (fide Parker; see comment). Toes weakly webbed, lengths 4>3>5>2>1; tips rounded, not dilated; subarticular tubercles indistinct, numbers on toes not reported; indistinct inner and outer metatarsal tubercles.

Color in life unknown. Dorsum purplish brown, no mark mentioned; large dark brown, oval black inguinal spot without light border; loris edged with reddish rose that extends posteriorly above eye and onto and widening on trunk to inguina and hindlimbs; loris, chin to anterior chest black fading to yellowish.

ETYMOLOGY.— Great Natuna Island is also called Bunguran, whence the name of the species as a resident of Bunguran.

DISTRIBUTION.— Great Natuna Island.

NATURAL HISTORY.— Günther considered it a common frog owing to its abundance in collections.

COMMENTS.— Preceding information extracted from Günther (1895) and Parker (1934). Parker considered C. heterochirus Boulenger as a synonym of K. bunguranus and may have included traits of the former in the description of the latter. Parker reported nuptial pads on dorsum of fingers; Inger (1966: table 16) specifically noted their absence.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Microhylidae

Genus

Kalophrynus

Loc

Kalophrynus bunguranus ( Günther, 1895 ) Natuna Sticky Frog

Zug, George R. 2015
2015
Loc

Diplopelma bunguranum Günther, 1895

Gunther 1895
1895
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF