Teratohyla amelie ( Cisneros-Heredia & Meza-Ramos 2007 )

Twomey, Evan, Delia, Jesse & Castroviejo-Fisher, Santiago, 2014, A review of Northern Peruvian glassfrogs (Centrolenidae), with the description of four new remarkable species, Zootaxa 3851 (1), pp. 1-87 : 53-54

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3851.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9840D64B-F08C-44E7-B2DC-4818F8FFDD4F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6136447

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/664887B1-FFED-FF8A-FF7C-FA0BD38CFBE7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Teratohyla amelie ( Cisneros-Heredia & Meza-Ramos 2007 )
status

 

Teratohyla amelie ( Cisneros-Heredia & Meza-Ramos 2007) View in CoL

Figure 27 View FIGURE 27. a, b

Cochranella amelie Cisneros-Heredia and Meza-Ramos 2007 View in CoL . Holotype DHMECN 3066, an adult male from “Comunidad de Oglán, Cantón Arajuno, Provincia de Pastaza, República del Ecuador (01°18’65”S, 77°42’41”W, 600 m elevation)” Teratohyla amelie— Guayasamin, Castroviejo-Fisher, Trueb, Ayarzagüena, and Vilà 2009.

Background information. This species was described on the basis of two adult males collected from a locality in the east-Andean foothills of central Ecuador. The combination of white visceral peritonea, green bones in life, transparent parietal peritoneum, humeral spines absent in adult males, bulbous liver, and dorsum lavender in preservative is unique among known centrolenid species. Guayasamin et al. (2008) provided molecular sequence data for a specimen identified as “ Cochranella cf. amelie View in CoL ” from southern Peru, and Guayasamin et al. (2009) placed this species in the genus Teratohyla on the basis of genetics and morphology.

New data. We have collected five specimens from two sites in northern Peru. Additionally, we have studied two specimens from southern Peru (one of them mentioned by Guayasamin et al. 2008). These seven specimens fit the description of Teratohyla amelie , which have a completely transparent parietal peritoneum, a character state only present in species of Chimerella View in CoL , Hyalinobatrachium View in CoL , and Teratohyla pulverata , Vitreorana antisthenesi View in CoL , V. gorzulae View in CoL , V. uranoscopa View in CoL , V. eurygnatha View in CoL , and V. pa r v u l a. Teratohyla amelie has green bones versus white in all species of Hyalinobatrachium View in CoL , except for H. taylori View in CoL from which it is distinguished by a rounded snout in profile (sloping in H. taylori View in CoL ). Males of Chimerella View in CoL and V. gorzulae View in CoL have humeral spines (absent in T. amelie ). Vitreorana uranoscopa View in CoL , V. eurygnatha View in CoL , and V. parvula View in CoL have a white urinary bladder peritoneum (transparent urinary bladder peritoneum in T. amelie ). Teratohyla pulverata has a sloping snout in profile and scalloped, white ulnar and tarsal folds (snout rounded in profile and scalloped, white ulnar and tarsal folds absent).

Four specimens (MNCN 45959 through MNCN 45962) were collected from a small stream running through an overgrown cacao plantation, roughly 92 km N of Bagua, 2.3 km south (airline) from the village of Huabico (4°57'16.59"S, 78°12'39.92"W, 349 m). An additional specimen (MNCN 45958) was found in southern San Martín department, Peru, in a stream on the Juanjui-Tocache road, near the village of Nuevo Jaen (7°39'16.20"S, 76°39'24.60"W, 591 m). The other two specimens (MHNC 5646 and MNCN 44212) were collected on February 1, 2007 by J. C. Chaparro, J. M. Padial, I. De la Riva, and SC-F at a stream crossing the road at 10 km from Quincemil towards Puerto Maldonado (13°12’03.6’’ S, 70°40’28.9’’ W; 572 m), Provincia Ouspicanchis, Departamento Cusco. These localities narrow the distributional gap between the specimens from Cusco, Peru and those from Ecuador.

Vocalizations. We have not been able to obtain recordings of this species, although we observed males calling in Huabico and Cusco (ET and SC-F respectively). The call sounded similar to T. midas , consisting of a short “chirp”, which sounded roughly similar (by ear) to the T. midas call described below. All individuals (including calling males) were found on the upper surfaces of leaves, roughly 2–3 m above the stream.

Distribution and ecology. Considering the additional records provided above, Teratohyla amelie is distributed in the east-Andean foothills (349–600 m) from Central Ecuador to Central Peru, roughly between 1° and 7° south latitude, and with an isolated record in southern Peru. In Peru, T. amelie has been found alongside Cochranella erminea .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Centrolenidae

Genus

Teratohyla

Loc

Teratohyla amelie ( Cisneros-Heredia & Meza-Ramos 2007 )

Twomey, Evan, Delia, Jesse & Castroviejo-Fisher, Santiago 2014
2014
Loc

Cochranella amelie

Cisneros-Heredia and Meza-Ramos 2007
2007
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