Rana sp.

Vasilyan, Davit, Cernansky, Andrej, Szyndlar, Zbigniew & Moers, Thomas, 2022, Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany, Fossil Record 25 (1), pp. 99-145 : 99

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7A16698D-4F18-48D2-9D96-51A6E0CC15AC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/00373934-6CB5-5964-AA29-8E739A26F7CC

treatment provided by

by Pensoft

scientific name

Rana sp.
status

 

Rana sp.

Fig. 9E-H View Figure 9

Material.

Three ilia HLMD-Ez 2092-2094.

Description.

The best-preserved ilium (HLMD-Ez 2094, Fig. 9G, H View Figure 9 ) shows a well-developed (rather narrow and high) dorsal acetabular expansion and a reduced (broad and low) ventral acetabular expansion. The dorsal prominence is not very high. It is oriented rather anteriorly than anterodorsally. The dorsal protuberance has an oval outline. Its surface is either smooth (HLMD-Ez 2094, Fig. 9G View Figure 9 ) or possesses muscle scars (HLMD-Ez 2093, Fig. 9E View Figure 9 ). The iliac shaft is rather thin and round in cross-section. A low and thin bone lamina connects the iliac shaft and the dorsal prominence. In posterior view, the dorsal prominence projects laterodorsally. The ilioischiatic juncture is narrow (Fig. 9H View Figure 9 ).

Remarks.

Echzell frog ilia can be clearly assigned to green Pelophylax and brown Rana frogs based on the following characters. The genus Pelophylax is characterised by: anterodorsally oriented, high, large and dorsomedially curved dorsal prominence and protuberance; the dorsal protuberance has a smooth surface; whereas the genus Rana by in lateral view anterodorsally and in posterior view laterodorsally oriented, rather low and reduced dorsal prominence and protuberance, the dorsal protuberance has smooth or irregular surface ( Böhme 1977; Blain et al. 2007).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Ranidae