Ranitomeya reticulata Boulenger, 1884

Brown, Jason L., Twomey, Evan, Amézquita, Adolfo, Souza, Moisés Barbosa De, Caldwell, Jana- Lee P., Lötters, Stefan, May, Rudolf Von, Melo-Sampaio, Paulo Roberto, Mejía-Vargas, Daniel, Perez-Peña, Pedro, Pepper, Mark, Poelman, Erik H., Sanchez-Rodriguez, Manuel & Summers, Kyle, 2011, A taxonomic revision of the Neotropical poison frog genus Ranitomeya (Amphibia: Dendrobatidae) 3083, Zootaxa 3083 (1), pp. 1-120 : 52-53

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3083.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1D338788-9573-156F-C8FC-98EF3CACF80C

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Felipe

scientific name

Ranitomeya reticulata Boulenger, 1884
status

 

Ranitomeya reticulata Boulenger, 1884 View in CoL “1883”

Account authors: J.L. Brown, E. Twomey, S. Lötters, P. Perez-Peña

Figs. 3 View FIGURE 3 , 4 View FIGURE 4 , 9 View FIGURE 9 , 15 View FIGURE 15 (o – r), 16 (a – g), 18, 21

Tables 1, 4 – 6

Dendrobates reticulatus Boulenger, 1884 View in CoL “1883”: p. 635, Plate 57, drawing 2 [NHML 1947.2.15.5 – 12 (eight syntypes) collected by Paul Hahnel from “Yurimaguas, Huallaga River, Peru ”]; – Myers & Daly 1980: p. 20; Zimmermann & Zimmermann 1984: p. p. 35, 1985; Almendariz 1987: p. 77; Hermann 1988: p. 78; Wiltenmuth & Nishikawa 1994: p. 57; Divossen 1999: p. 58, 2000: p. 20; Rodriguez & Duellman 1994: p. 16; Lötters et al. 2003: p. 1909; Christmann 2004: p. 6, Figs. on p. 87, 92, 96; Santos et al. 2009, by implication

Dendrobates tinctorius igneus Melin, 1941: p. 66 View in CoL , Fig. 37A–B View FIGURE 37 [MHNG 19.1.1925,

20.1.1925 (two syntypes) from " Rio Itaya (near Iquitos), Perú ", collected in 1925 ]

Dendrobates quinquevittatus View in CoL (non Steindachner 1864) – Silverstone 1975 (partim): p. 33, Fig. 14 A–C View FIGURE 14 ; Lescure & Bechter 1982: p. 26

Ranitomeya reticulata View in CoL — Bauer 1988: p. 1; Grant et al. 2006: p. 171; Lötters et al. 2007: p. 489, Figs. 619, 620; von May et al. 2008a: p. 394, Appendix 1; Werner et al. 2010, 2011: p. 16, Figs. 1–3

Ranitomeya ignea View in CoL — Grant et al. 2006: p. 171

Dendrobates igneus View in CoL — Santos et al. 2009, by implication

Background information. Ranitomeya reticulata shares, with R. fantastica , the distinction of being the first species of Ranitomeya to be described ( Boulenger 1884 “1883”). This species is also the type species of the genus Ranitomeya ( Bauer 1988; for discussion see Grant et al. 2006). In the last 30 years, little controversy has surrounded the validity of this species. For a comparison of R. reticulata to R. ventrimaculata , see the R. ventrimaculata account.

Tadpole. The description is based on a single live tadpole from Yanamono, Loreto, Peru. Mouthparts were verified in another tadpole from the same locality. The tadpole was feeding on detritus .

Tadpole in stage 30; no external gills. Body ovoid in dorsal view, wider near vent. Total length 16.6; body length 9.8; tail length 6.8, tail length 41% of total length. Body width 5.1; body depth 4.0, 78% of body width. Eye well-developed; naris small; distance from naris to anterior edge of eye 0.7. Eye positioned dorsally on head, directed dorsolaterally. Spiracle well developed; vent tube dextral.

Tip of tail bluntly rounded. Tail muscle height at base of tail 2.5; tail muscle width at base of tail 2.3; maximum tail height 4.1. Dorsal fin same height as ventral fin.

Oral disc ventral, emarginate; transverse width 2.4, 14% of body width. Single row of small papillae present laterally and ventrally; wide dorsal gap where papillae absent. LTRF 2(2)/3(1) with A-1 developed on upper labium, A-2 with wide medial gap (30% of total width); P-1 on lower labium with narrow medial gap; P-2 equal in width to P-1; P-3 80% width of P-1.

In life, head and body gray; mouthparts visible from above. Abdomen mostly transparent; intestinal coils black, heart visible. Tail musculature uniform gray, dorsal and ventral fins opaque gray.

Natural history. Some authors have observed this species engaging in biparental care and maternal egg provisioning in captivity ( Zimmermann & Zimmermann 1984; Christmann 2004), such as has been observed in the wild in R. imitator and R. vanzolinii ( Caldwell 1997, Caldwell & de Oliveira 1999, Brown et al. 2010). These behaviors have never been confirmed in the field in R. reticulata , despite considerable attention by researchers ( Divossen 1999, 2000; Werner et al. 2011). In these studies, the authors observed a species with male-only parental care and a polygamous mating system. Lastly, other members of the reticulata group (where parental care behaviour is known) demonstrate male-only parental care and biparental care is limited to some members of the vanzolinii group ( Summers & McKeon 2004; Lötters et al. 2007). The phylogenetic placement of this species, sister to other male parental care species, cannot exclude the possibility of the independent evolution of this trait; however, it is not likely, given that biparental care/maternal provisioning is only known to have evolved twice in the family Dendrobatidae ( Summers & McKeon 2004) .

Taxonomic notes. In 1941, Melin described Dendrobates tinctorius igneus . Little information is published on this putative taxon, possibly because of a lack of credence in its validity (see Silverstone 1975). Schulte (1999) regarded it as a junior synonym of R. reticulata , and stated that it was a morph that maintained juvenile coloration. Grant et al. (2006) elevated this subspecies to specific status as Ranitomeya ignea , without comment or justification. After examining the holotype, Lötters & Vences (2000) suggested this species may be conspecific with either amazonica and/or reticulata (both sensu this paper). However, based on our (J.L. Brown, E. Twomey, unpub. data) observations on Puente Itaya frogs (the type localiy of ignea ), we are confident the frogs described by Melin are referable to reticulata and not amazonica . The holotype (NHMG 512) possesses dorsolateral and middorsal stripes (partially broken) that extend about three-fourths of the SVL (14.9 mm), a characteristic common in striped R. reticulata . In contrast, in R. amazonica the middorsal stripe typically terminates between the shoulders (i.e., about one-fourth of the SVL). Lastly, we observed several populations of R. reticulata along the Iquitos–Nauta road, especially near Puente Itaya, that possess black dorsal markings similar to the holotype of ignea (which forms a dashed ‘U’). As a conclusion, we place Dendrobates tinctorius igneus Melin, 1941 as a junior synonym of Ranitomeya reticulata ( Boulenger, 1884 “1883”).

Distribution. This species in known to occur within the Amazonian rainforests of Peru (Loreto Department) and Ecuador (Pastaza Province), Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 .

Conservation status. Following the IUCN Red List categories and criteria ( IUCN 2010), we tentatively suggest listing this species as Near Threatened (NT). Although the distribution of this species is estimated to be around 20,000 km 2, much deforestation has occurred along Río Amazonas. Further, Iquitos, a very large city, occupies the center of its distribution.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Dendrobatidae

Genus

Ranitomeya

Loc

Ranitomeya reticulata Boulenger, 1884

Brown, Jason L., Twomey, Evan, Amézquita, Adolfo, Souza, Moisés Barbosa De, Caldwell, Jana- Lee P., Lötters, Stefan, May, Rudolf Von, Melo-Sampaio, Paulo Roberto, Mejía-Vargas, Daniel, Perez-Peña, Pedro, Pepper, Mark, Poelman, Erik H., Sanchez-Rodriguez, Manuel & Summers, Kyle 2011
2011
Loc

Ranitomeya ignea

Grant, T. & Frost, D. R. & Caldwell, J. P. & Gagliardo, R. & Haddad, C. F. B. & Kok, P. J. R. & Means, D. B. & Noonan, B. P. & Schargel, W. E. & Wheeler, W. 2006: 171
2006
Loc

Ranitomeya reticulata

Werner P. & Elle, O. & Schulte, L. & Lotters, S. 2011: 16
von May, R. & Catenazzi, A. & Angulo, A. & Brown, J. L. & Carrillo, J. & Chavez, G. & Cordova, J. H. & Curo, A. & Delgado, A. & Enciso, M. A. & Gutierrez, R. & Lehr, E. & Martinez, J. L. & Medina-Muller, M. & Miranda, A. & Neira, D. R. & Ochoa, J. A. & Quiroz, A. J. & Rodriguez, D. A. & Rodriguez, L. O. & Salas, A. W. & Seimon, T. & Seimon, A. & Siu-Ting, K. & Suarez, J. & Torres, J. & Twomey, E. 2008: 394
Lotters, S. & Jungfer, K. - H. & Schmidt, W. & Henkel, F. W. 2007: 489
Grant, T. & Frost, D. R. & Caldwell, J. P. & Gagliardo, R. & Haddad, C. F. B. & Kok, P. J. R. & Means, D. B. & Noonan, B. P. & Schargel, W. E. & Wheeler, W. 2006: 171
Bauer, L. 1988: 1
1988
Loc

Dendrobates quinquevittatus

Bechter R. & Lescure, J. 1982: 26
1982
Loc

Dendrobates reticulatus

Christmann, S. P. 2004: 6
Lotters, S. & Reichle, S. & Jungfer, K. - H. 2003: 1909
Divossen, H. 1999: 58
Wiltenmuth, E. B. & Nishikawa, K. C. 1994: 57
Rodriguez, L. O. & Duellman, W. E. 1994: 16
Almendariz, L. A. 1987: 77
Myers, C. W. & Daly, J. W. 1980: 20
1980
Loc

Dendrobates tinctorius igneus

Melin, D. E. 1941: 66
1941
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