Craugastor montanus ( Taylor 1942 )

Jameson, Tom J. M., Streicher, Jeffrey W., Manuelli, Luigi, Head, Jason J. & Smith, Eric N., 2022, Miniaturization in Direct-Developing Frogs from Mexico with the Description of Six New Species, Herpetological Monographs 36 (1), pp. 1-48 : 29

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1655/0733-1347-36.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:52832190-3BE2-4251-ABFB-61B1280270C9

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6518542

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F287F8-FF95-FF9B-CA08-C214FBEFBCCC

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Craugastor montanus ( Taylor 1942 )
status

 

Craugastor montanus ( Taylor 1942) View in CoL

Microbatrachylus montanus Taylor 1942:67 . Holotype female ( USNM 115507 ) from ‘‘Mount Ovando, Chiapas, Mexico.’’ [Examined] .

Eleutherodactylus sartori Lynch 1965:10 View in CoL . [Replacement name].

Craugastor montanus (Taylor) View in CoL : Crawford and Smith 2005:536.

Diagnosis. —Based on holotype ( Fig. 1E View FIG ). Aspecies of Craugastor distinguished by the following combination of characters: (1) moderate adult size (holotype, SVL ¼ 24.5 mm); (2) ossification of most of skeleton in adults; (3) presence of posterolateral projection of frontoparietal; (4) presence of vomerine odontophores; (5) presence or absence of raised tubercles on eyelids; (6) supratympanic fold moderate to poorly developed; (7) face flank barred with or without canthal stripe, 1–2 particularly dark bars below eye; (8) one (or two fused) postrictal tubercles; (9) gular region with pale spotting; (10) dorsal surface blotched or unicolored pale; diffuse interorbital bar, small suprascapular spots; sometimes with two dark rump spots (11) middorsal ridge present; (12) dorsum smooth with only few fine tubercles; (13) body flank darker anteriorly (post axillary), slightly shagreened to smooth; (14) inguinal gland present and axillary gland present in adults; (15) when leg adpressed to body, heel reaches snout tip or beyond; (16) outer tarsal ridge with 0–2 small and round tubercles close to heel, no raised fringe; (17) finger and toe tips round, finger tips slightly or not expanded, toe tips expanded; (18) inner metatarsal tubercle larger than outer metatarsal tubercle.

Comparisons. — Craugastor montanus can be differentiated from C. candelariensis , C. cueyatl , C. hobartsmithi , and C. portilloensis by equal sizes of the inner and outer metatarsal tubercles (unequal sizes in C. montanus ). It can be differentiated from C. bitonium and C. pygmaeus by the absence of a posterolateral projection of the frontoparietal (present in C. montanus ). It can be differentiated from C. polaclavus and C. rubinus by the absence of vomerine odontophores (present in C. montanus ). It can be differentiated from C. mexicanus , C. omiltemanus , and C. saltator by the general shape of its skull ( Fig. 12 View FIG ). It can be differentiated from C. mexicanus by the condition of supratympanic folds in adults; moderate to poorly developed in C. montanus versus developed in C. mexicanus . It can be differentiated from C. omiltemanus by ventral skin texture in life; smooth to granular in C. montanus versus areolate in C. omiltemanus . It can be differentiated from C. saltator by relative leg length; crus 53–59% SVL in C. montanus versus 62–73% SVL in C. saltator .

Description. —In previous literature, described as moderately sized (males average 16.2 mm SVL, females average 24.0 mm SVL); Finger Ishorter than Finger II; three palmar tubercles; testes black; inner metatarsal tubercle larger than outer metatarsaltubercle ( Lynch 2000). Lynch (2000:133) redescribed C. montanus (as E. sartori ) owing to ‘‘errors in Taylor’s (1942) original description that were repeated by Lynch (1965, 1970)’’.

Distribution. —This species is known from intermediate to high elevations (~ 2000 m) of the Sierra Madre de Chiapas in the state of Chiapas, Mexico ( Lynch 2000), and adjacent regions of the Department of San Marcos, Guatemala ( Crawford and Smith 2005). This region contains a complex mixture of dry forests, mixed forests, cloud forests, and pine– oak forests.

Phylogenetics. —In the concatenated analysis, C. montanus was recovered as the sister taxon of all other members of the C. mexicanus series (ML ¼ 66, BAYES ¼ 0.99; Fig. 3 View FIG ). It also had this placement in the mtDNA-only analysis ( Fig. 4 View FIG ), but not in the nDNA analysis where it was found with weak support to be the sister taxon of a clade containing all taxa except C. mexicanus and C. omiltemanus (ML ¼ 33, BAYES ¼ 0.73; Fig. 5 View FIG ). This differs from the phylogenetic placement of C. montanus (as E. sartori ) in the nDNA-only analysis of Crawford and Smith (2005). In terms of genetic distances ( Table 4 View TABLE ), C. montanus was most similar to C. polaclavus (5.7%) followed by similarity with C. mexicanus (6.1%).

Remarks. —The skull of C. montanus is similar to C. hobartsmithi and C. pygmaeus , with more posteriorly placed anterior suture of the frontoparietal and prootic than in other species. The skull of C. montanus was also described by Lynch (2000) as E. sartori . Lynch (1965) created the neonym, Eleutherodactylus sartori , because Eleutherodactylus montanus was preoccupied by a West Indian species. This is the most southernly distributed species in the C. mexicanus series. Craugastor montanus likely co-occurs with C. pygmaeus .

The type locality of C. greggi ( Bumzahem 1955) is Volcan Tajumulco in San Marcos, Guatemala near where we sampled C. montanus for our molecular analysis ( Fig. 6 View FIG ). Although C. greggi was placed in the C. laticeps series of Hedges et al. (2008), it is allied to the C. mexicanus series by having Finger Ishorter than Finger II. This affinity was noted in the original description: ‘‘ Eleutherodactylus greggi seems to agree most closely with the member of the Eleutherodactylus mexicanus group...’’ ( Bumzahem 1955:119). However, C. greggi was differentiated from C. montanus E. sartori ) by Lynch (2000) on the basis of fusion between the last presacral vertebrae and sacrum (not fused in C montanus ). Nonetheless, our preliminary examinations of the holotype of C. greggi ( Fig. 28 View FIG ) and collections from the Sierra de Chiapas suggest that future research is needed to confirm C. greggi can be differentiated from C. montanus because the taxa are united by multiple characters including (but not limited to) adult body size, presence of vomerine odonotophores, presence of posterolateral projection of frontoparietal, gular region with pale spotting, finger lengths, toe lengths, unequal sizes of the inner and outer metatarsal tubercles, and geographic distribution.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Craugastoridae

Genus

Craugastor

Loc

Craugastor montanus ( Taylor 1942 )

Jameson, Tom J. M., Streicher, Jeffrey W., Manuelli, Luigi, Head, Jason J. & Smith, Eric N. 2022
2022
Loc

Craugastor montanus (Taylor)

Crawford and Smith 2005: 536
2005
Loc

Eleutherodactylus sartori

Lynch, J. D. 1965: 10
1965
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF