Rana adenopleura Boulenger, 1909

Chuaynkern, Yodchaiy, Ohler, Annemarie, Inthara, Chantip & Duengkae, Prateep, 2010, A Revision Of Species In The Subgenus Nidirana Dubois, 1992, With Special Attention To The Identity Of Specimens Allocated To Rana Adenopleura Boulenger, 1909, And Rana Chapaensis (Bourret, 1937) (Amphibia: Anura: Ranidae) From Thailand And Laos, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 58 (2), pp. 291-310 : 302-303

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5342868

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5448783

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/35312B58-FF83-FFD9-278B-F871FE55E0E7

treatment provided by

Diego

scientific name

Rana adenopleura Boulenger, 1909
status

 

Rana adenopleura Boulenger, 1909 View in CoL

Rana adenopleura Boulenger, 1909: 492 View in CoL . [Syntypes: BM (“several specimens”). Type-locality: Fuhacho Village (= Maobu or Wucheng, Nantou County), altitude about 4,000 feet (ca. 1 219 m), Taiwan.]

Material examined. – Taiwan: Fushan Nature Reserve (NMNS 1512-1, 1512-3 to 11, 1512-14 to 23), Horisha (AMNH A 11618- 623), Pingtung (MCZ A-125372), Polisia Forosa (CAS 19693–696), Tai-Chung Hsien (Huan-Shan) (AMNH A 68242 View Materials –243), Yang Ming Mountain (CAS-SUA 20485–487) .

Taxonomic notes. – Rana adenopleura was described by Boulenger (1909) from four specimens collected at “Fuhacho”, Taiwan. Several authors regarded the frogs from continental China belonging to R. adenopleura and regarded the congeneric species from Fukien namely R. caldwelli as a synonym ( Pope, 1931; Liu, 1950; Kuramoto, 1985; Chou, 1999; Orlov et al., 2002). Based on published evidences, Dubois (1992) proposed to keep the name of R. adenopleura for Taiwan population and restricted the name of R. caldwelli for the Fujian population. As given above, the morphological and morphometrical comparisons confirm the differences between these two species as similar as the proposal of Dubois (1992).

Diagnostic characters. – Rana adenopleura is characterized by the following combination of characters: (1) body elongated; (2) SVL of adult males 48.5 ± 2.7 (44.6–53.9 mm), adult females 49.9 ± 1.9 (47.6–52.8 mm); (3) nostril directed laterally; (4) marginal grooves on fingers present or absent; (5) marginal grooves on toes present; (6) mid-dorsal stripe present or absent; (7) external vocal sac present; (8) nuptial pad present on thumb and first finger, forming a single pad; (9) suprabrachial gland present and large; (10) nest construction behavior absent; (11) spinules present on entire dorsum of head and body (in adult males); (12) spinules on ventrum present in adult males; (13) tibio-tarsal articulation reach snout tip or between eye to snout; (14) finger tips dilated; (15) toe tips dilated; (16) relative length of fingers II<I<IV<III; (17) relative length of toes I<II<III=V<IV; (18) pigmented eggs; (19) larval keratodont formula 1:1+1/1+1:2; (20) Calling: 2–4 loud “gai-gai-…” notes.

Distribution. — China (Taiwan).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Ranidae

Genus

Rana

Loc

Rana adenopleura Boulenger, 1909

Chuaynkern, Yodchaiy, Ohler, Annemarie, Inthara, Chantip & Duengkae, Prateep 2010
2010
Loc

Rana adenopleura Boulenger, 1909: 492

Boulenger, G 1909: 492
1909
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