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Brachytarsophrys guilinensis
Wu, Pan, Xiao, Chen, Yu & Wei, 2025 |
Abstract
Currently, the genus Brachytarsophrys contains nine species. In this study, we describe a new species of Brachytarsophrys, named Brachytarsophrys guilinensis sp. nov., from northeastern Guangxi, China, based on morphological, molecular, and acoustic evidence. This new species can be distinguished from other known congeners by the combination of the following morphological characters: (1) smaller body size (SVL 70.0‒81.9 mm in eight adult males); (2) head wider than long, with head width nearly 1.5 times the length and about half of the SVL; (3) tongue broad and round, feebly notched; (4) male with nuptial pad on the dorsal surface of the first and second fingers; (5) hind limbs relatively short and robust, heels not meeting when legs are positioned at a right angle to the body; (6) tibiotarsal articulation reaching the angle of the mouth when hind limbs are extended forward alongside the body; (7) absence of outer metatarsal tubercle, with the inner metatarsal tubercle oval and approximately equal to the first toe; (8) fingers without webbing; toes with incomplete webbing, webbing formula: I1 - 2II1 - 2III1½ - 3-IV3- - 1½V; (9) lateral fringes on toes wide; (10) several warts on the outer side of the upper eyelid, with one being relatively larger. Phylogenetic analyses based on mitochondrial 16S rRNA, COI, and Cytb genes revealed that this new species is more closely related to B. popei and B. orientalis than to other known species, with strong Bayesian posterior probability and moderate bootstrap support. More studies are necessary to clarify the taxonomy and species diversity of the genus Brachytarsophrys in Guangxi, China.
Key Words: Acoustic, phylogenetic analysis, species diversity, taxonomy
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Dorsolateral view of the holotype of Brachytarsophrys guilinensis sp. nov. (GXNU YU000904) in life (A) and dorsal (B) and ventral (C) views of the holotype of the species in preservative. |
Brachytarsophrys guilinensis sp. nov.
Etymology. The species name guilinensis is derived from the type locality of this species, Guilin City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. We suggest the English common name “Guilin Short-legged Toad” and the Chinese common name “Guì Lín Duǎn Tuǐ Chán (桂林短腿蟾)”.
Diagnosis. Brachytarsophrys guilinensis sp. nov. could be distinguished from its congeners by the combination of the following morphological characters: (1) smaller body size (SVL 70.0‒81.9 mm in eight adult males); (2) head wider than long, head width nearly 1.5 times the length, and about half of the SVL; (3) tongue broad and round, feebly notched; (4) male with nuptial pad present on the dorsal surface of the first and second fingers; (5) hind limbs relatively short and robust, heels do not meet when legs positioned at right angle to body; (6) tibiotarsal articulation reaches the angle of mouth when the hind limbs are extended forward alongside the body; (7) absence of outer metatarsal tubercle, inner metatarsal tubercle oval and approximately equal to first toe; (8) fingers without webbing, toes have webbing but incomplete, webbing formula: I1 - 2II1 - 2III1½ - 3-IV3- - 1½V; (9) lateral fringes on toes wide; (10) several warts on the outer side of the upper eyelid, with one being relatively larger.
Xiangjian Wu, Yuanqiang Pan, Wei Xiao, Ju Chen, Guohua Yu and Xinkui Wei. 2025. Integrative Taxonomic Evidence for A New Species of the Short-legged Toads
Brachytarsophrys (Anura, Megophryidae) from Guangxi, China.
Zoosystematics and Evolution. 101(4): 1369-1382. DOI:
doi.org/10.3897/zse.101.157834