Rhacophorus, Kuhl & Van Hasselt, 1822

Yu, Guohua, Rao, Dingqi, Yang, Junxing & Zhang, Mingwang, 2008, Phylogenetic relationships among Rhacophorinae (Rhacophoridae, Anura, Amphibia), with an emphasis on the Chinese species, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 153 (4), pp. 733-749 : 746

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00404.x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039D87CB-4C17-FFEC-FE80-47E8FB9DB632

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Rhacophorus
status

 

SYSTEMATICS OF RHACOPHORUS View in CoL

Kou, Hu & Gao (2001) described ‘ Polypedates pingbianensis ( R. pingbianensis: sensu Fei et al., 2005 ) as a valid species, but Fei et al. (2005) (without comment) did not recognize it as such. According to Kou et al. (2001), R. pingbianensis is close to R. omeimontis morphologically, and the difference between them is that the former has no vocal sacs or lineae masculinae, whereas the latter has internal subgular vocal sacs and lineae masculinae. In the present study, R. pingbianensis and R. omeimontis form a monophyletic group with high support values from all analyses. Furthermore, ML and Bayesian trees demonstrate that R. pingbianensis is the sister taxon to R. omeimontis , albeit that the support values are not strong, and so it is treated here as a valid species related to R. omeimontis .

The distinction between Rhacophorus and ‘ Polypedates ’ is under debate (e.g. Liem, 1970; Dubois, 1987; Jiang et al., 1987; Fei, 1999; Fei et al., 2005). Wilkinson & Drewes (2000) suggested that a green dorsal pattern might be a character to distinguish between the two genera. In the present study, all phylogenetic analyses support a monophyletic group, in which most species of Chinese Rhacophorus with a green dorsal pattern are included, with the exceptions of Rhacophorus reinwardtii (Schlegel, 1840) and Rhacophorus bipunctatus Ahl, 1927 (clade IV). Furthermore, R. reinwardtii is closely related to the group consisting of R. bipunctatus and R. rhodopus (see clade V). This suggests that the green dorsal pattern has arisen at least three times in the taxa examined here, and cannot be used to characterize a monophyletic Rhacophorus .

Rhacophorus reinwardtii , R. rhodopus , and R. bipunctatus belong to the R. reinwardtii group of Fei (1999). Wilkinson et al. (2002) found that R. reinwardtii is the sister taxon of R. bipunctatus . However, our results indicate that R. reinwardtii is close to the clade containing R. rhodopus and R. bipunctatus , although the support from MP analysis is marginal. Frost (2007) united R. rhodopus into R. bipunctatus , but without discussion. According to Fei (1999), R. bipunctatus has a green dorsum and two black spots on the axilla, whereas the dorsum of R. rhodopus is red–brown, and there is only one black spot on the axilla. Furthermore, in China, R. bipunctatus is found only in Xizang (Tibet), whereas R. rhodopus has a wide distribution including Xizang (Tibet), Yunnan, Guangxi, and Hainan Provinces. In the present study, the monophyly of R. rhodopus is not supported. Rhacophorus rhodopus obviously can be divided into three lineages, and the lineage from Hainan Island is the sister group of R. bipunctatus (see clade V). These results indicate that the genetic structure of R. rhodopus is complicated; Frost’s (2007) placement of R. rhodopus into the synonymy of R. bipunctatus is not accepted here because the distinctive lineages within R. rhodopus may represent cryptic species, just one of which, such as the Hainan Island population, is close to R. bipunctatus . Unfortunately, no samples were available from Guangxi Province, or from adjacent countries such as Vietnam and Burma, so more studies will be needed to unveil the general phylogenetic structure within R. rhodopus .

Rhacophorus dugritei , R. nigropunctatus , and R. chenfui belong to the R. dugritei group ( Fei et al., 2005). However, there is a monophyletic group consisting of R. dugritei , R. minimus , and R. moltrechti with strong Bayesian posterior probability, albeit that the bootstrap values of MP and ML trees for it are weak (see clade IV). So the R. dugritei group of Fei et al. (2005) needs re-evaluation. Additionally, five specimens from Wenshan County, Yunnan Province, form an independent clade, which is related to the group consisting of R. reinwardtii , R. rhodopus , and R. bipunctatus in all analyses, although the support values are not strong (see clade V). This lineage might represent an undescribed species of Rhacophorus View in CoL .

Using single samples of each species, Wilkinson et al. (2002) found that R. megacephalus and R. leucomystax , which were placed into the genus ‘ Polypedates View in CoL ’ by some herpetologists (e.g. Matsui, Seto & Utsunomiya, 1986; Wilkinson et al., 2002; Frost, 2007), are sister taxa. Rhacophorus megacephalu s was once included in R. leucomystax as a subspecies (e.g. Stejneger, 1925; Dubois, 1987). Matsui et al. (1986) resurrected R. megacephalus from the synonymy of R. leucomystax based on differences of morphology, voice, and karyotype between populations of Taiwan Island and Kalimantan. However, Rao & Yang (1996) found that the karyotypes of the R. megacephalus group are stable, and suggested that only R. megacephalus can be regarded as a subspecies of R. leucomystax . In the present study, a monophyletic group consisting of R. megacephalus and R. leucomystax is supported by all analyses, and there are at least three distinct clades in this leucomystax / megacephalus complex, although R. leucomystax is nested in R. megacephalus (see clade VI). Moreover, using the fragment of the 16S gene without excluding hypervariable regions, the P distances between these clades as shown in the MP tree are 4.3–6.4%, which is obviously higher than the P distances within these clades (0.4–1.6%). These indicate the inclusion of various species and the necessity for a revision of the leucomystax / megacephalus complex.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Diplopoda

Order

Polydesmida

Family

Chelodesmidae

Loc

Rhacophorus

Yu, Guohua, Rao, Dingqi, Yang, Junxing & Zhang, Mingwang 2008
2008
Loc

R. minimus

Rao, Wilkinson & Liu 2006
2006
Loc

R. nigropunctatus

Liu, Hu & Yang 1962
1962
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

Rhacophorus rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. rhodopus

Liu & Hu 1959
1959
Loc

R. chenfui

Liu 1945
1945
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. bipunctatus

Ahl 1927
1927
Loc

R. moltrechti

Boulenger 1908
1908
Loc

Polypedates

Tschudi 1838
1838
Loc

Rhacophorus

Kuhl & Van Hasselt 1822
1822
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