Monday, June 25, 2012

[Herpetology • 2003] Duttaphrynus (Bufo) crocus • A new species of Bufo (Anura: Bufonidae) from the southwest coast of Myanmar (Burma)


Duttaphrynus (Bufo) crocus




Endemic to Myanmar. Bufo crocus has currently only been collected at two localities in primary evergreen forest near the Rakhine Yoma Elephant Sanctuary, Gwa Township, Rakhine Division, on the southwest coast of Myanmar, below 100 m asl (Wogan et al. 2003). The known range of this species will likely be extended by subsequent surveys (Wogan 2004).


Wogan, G.O.U., Win, H., Thin, T., Lwin, K.S., Shein, A.K., Kyi, S.W. and Tun, H. 2003. A new species of Bufo (Anura: Bufonidae) from Myanmar (Burma), and redescription of the little-known species Bufo stuarti Smith 1929. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences: 141-153.


Dubois, A. and Ohler, A. 1999. Asian and Oriental toads of the Bufo melanostictus, Bufo scaber and Bufo stejnegeri groups (Amphibia, Anura): a list of available and valid names and description of some name bearing types. Journal of South Asian Natural History: 133-180.


[Herpetology • 2003] Duttaphrynus (Bufo) stuarti (Smith, 1929) • redescription of the little-known Bufo species (Anura: Bufonidae) from northern Myanmar and extreme north-eastern India



Duttaphrynus stuarti (Smith 1929)

We saw several of them of different sizes in Pange and on our way from Ziro to Pange. The adult measured roughly 80 mm and it did not secrete sticky mucus when handled. However there were some secretions from the skin and could be distinguished from the distinct smell and sticky sensation after they were handled. It had an indistinct ridge on the head and the warts were less keratinized than in D. melanostictus or D. himalayanum. The fore limbs were longer than the latter species. The parotid glands are distinct but have a diffuse margin. Third finger was longest and the second finger was shortest. The feet had large prominent inner metatarsal tubercles. There were large palmar tubercles on the hands, suggesting a cursorial habit of the species. The sides of the fingers and toes had spinous warts. Under high magnification the warts on the dorsum had a rounded base with a pointed tip at the centre. The tympanum or the ear was indistinct and smaller than the pupil. Ventral surface of the skin was granular throughout. There was faint barring on the limbs. The webbing score was 20 out of max of 23. We found individuals as large as 80 mm. This species probably has a wide distribution in the hills of the northeast.

Range Description: This species is known only from northern Myanmar and extreme north-eastern India. At present it is known only from the following localities: Putao Plain (the type locality) in Kachin State, northern Myanmar; the area 20-30km to the east of the type locality in Putao Plain in Kachin State, northern Myanmar; Htamanthi, in northern Myanmar on the border with India; and extreme north-eastern India in Arunachal Pradesh and possibly in Assam. It is presumed to occur in between these localities, and probably also elsewhere, but due to lack of sampling in Myanmar and north-eastern India it has not yet been recorded more widely. Recent records from Myanmar are at 556-640m asl.





Wogan, G.O.U., Win, H., Thin, T., Lwin, K.S., Shein, A.K., Kyi, S.W. and Tun, H. 2003. A new species of Bufo (Anura: Bufonidae) from Myanmar (Burma), and redescription of the little-known species Bufo stuarti Smith 1929. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences: 141-153.

Dubois, A. and Ohler, A. 1999. Asian and Oriental toads of the Bufo melanostictus, Bufo scaber and Bufo stejnegeri groups (Amphibia, Anura): a list of available and valid names and description of some name bearing types. Journal of South Asian Natural History: 133-180.


Tuesday, June 19, 2012

[Herpetology • 2012] Back from the dead: The world’s rarest toad Adenomus kandianus Günther (1872) | Kandyan Dwarf Toad | rediscovered in Sri Lanka



The Kandyan Dwarf Toad | Adenomus kandianus Günther (1872) |
hadn't been seen for over a century until researchers stumbled on it in 2009. 
Photo courtesy of: L.J. Mendis Wickramasinghe

Abstract
Adenomus kandianus Günther (1872) was previously known only from two specimens both deposited in the British Museum, the holotype BMNH1947.2.20.63, and the syntype of A. kelaarti BMNH1947.2.20.62. The only record of A. kandianus since the initial description in 1872 was by Ferguson in 1876, who mentions two specimens resembling Bufo kandianus in his collection, making A. kandianus the world’s rarest toad. The species had not been reported since, and was considered extinct. Here we report on its rediscovery.

Key words: Adenomus, extinct amphibian, rediscover, Peak Wilderness, Sri Lanka

  

Back from the dead: The world’s rarest toad Adenomus kandianus rediscovered in Sri Lanka

Rediscovery of "Adenomus kandianus" ;an extict amphibian from Sri Lanka: http://www.ybasrilanka.org/2010/01/rediscovery-of-adenomus-kandianus.html

[Herpetology • 1998] Adenomus dasi | Das's Toad • A synopsis of the Sri Lankan Bufonidae (Amphibia: Anura)


© 2009 Andreas & Christel Nöllert

Adenomus dasi 
Manamendra-Arachchi & Pethiyagoda, 1998

© 2011 Milivoje Krvavac

Manamendra-Arachchi, K. and Pethiyagoda, R. 1998. A synopsis of the Sri Lankan Bufonidae (Amphibia: Anura), with description of two new species. Journal of South Asian Natural History (J. South Asian nat. Hist.). 3(2): 213-246.

[Herpetology • 1998] Duttaphrynus noellerti | Noellert's Toad • A synopsis of the Sri Lankan Bufonidae (Amphibia: Anura)


© 2009 Andreas & Christel Nöllert

Noellert`s Toad |
Duttaphrynus noellerti (Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda, 1998)
Synonym: Bufo noellerti Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda, 1998


© 2009 Dr. Madhava Meegaskumbura

Manamendra-Arachchi, K. and Pethiyagoda, R. 1998. A synopsis of the Sri Lankan Bufonidae (Amphibia: Anura), with description of two new species. Journal of South Asian Natural History (J. South Asian nat. Hist.). 3(2): 213-246.

Monday, June 11, 2012

[Herpetology • 2012] Cerrophidion sasai & C. wilsoni • Cryptic diversity in disjunct populations of Middle American Montane Pitvipers: a systematic reassessment of Cerrophidion godmani


Top: Cerrophidion sasai. Bottom: C. wilsoni. Photos: Eric Smith UTA

Abstract
The discovery and taxonomic recognition of cryptic species has become increasingly frequent with the application of molecular phylogenetic analyses, particularly for species with broad geographic distributions. In this study we focus on the venomous pitviper species Cerrophidion godmani that is widely distributed throughout the highlands of Central America. We provide evidence based on both molecular phylogenetic analyses and morphological data that C. godmani represents three deeply divergent lineages and is possibly non-monophyletic. These three lineages are relatively conserved in their morphology and tend to be highly variable among individuals, but we do find sufficient morphological characters to diagnose them as evolutionarily distinct. We apply these data, together with known geographic distributions of populations, to infer boundaries of these three divergent evolutionary lineages. Based on the body of evidence, we formally name and describe two new species of Cerrophidion and redescribe C. godmani sensu stricto.

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Two New Cryptic Species of Pit Vipers in the Genus Cerrophidion from Central America
The discovery of cryptic species has become increasingly frequent with the application of molecular phylogenetic analyses, particularly for species with broad geographic distributions. Now, Jadin et al. (2012) have described two new species of Central American montane pit vipers in the genus Cerrophidion, that had been previously confused with C. godmani, a widely distributed highland species found throughout Central America. The authors provide evidence based on both molecular phylogenetic analyses and morphological data that C. godmani represents three deeply divergent lineages and note that it is possibly polyphyletic. These three lineages are relatively conserved in their morphology and tend to be highly variable among individuals, but morphological characters were available to diagnose them as evolutionarily distinct. 

The Costa Rica montane pitviper, Cerrophidion sasai has a known range that includes parts of two mountain ranges which together cover portions of Costa Rica and Panama. The species occurs in both the Cordillera Central and the Cordillera de Talamanca. C. sasai uses lower montane and montane forest habitats as well as disturbed highland habitats.

The Honduran Montane pitviper, Cerrophidion wilsoni, inhabits lower montane rainforest between 1400 and 3491 m and may occur in nearby premontane rainforest and pine-oak forest as low as 1220 m and all known populations of C. wilsoni occur within the borders of Honduras and El Salvador but the highland areas that support populations of C. wilsoni in Honduras and El Salvador also extend into eastern Guatemala and the authors suggest the species very likely occurs in that country.

Five species of Cerrophidion are now known to occur in Neotropical montane habitats between ca. 1200 and 3500 m in elevation Two of these species (C. petlalcalensis and C. tzotzilorum) are endemic to Mexico and are restricted to geographically small ranges The third, C. godmani, is restricted by the authors to Guatemala and Mexico.


Jadin, R.C., Townsend, J.H., Castoe, T.A. & Campbell, J.A. 2012. Cryptic diversity in disjunct populations of Middle American Montane Pitvipers: a systematic reassessment of Cerrophidion godmani. Zoologica Scripta.  

[Herpetology • 2000] Bothriechis thalassinus | Merendon palm-pitviper • A new species of arboreal pitviper from the Atlantic versant of northern Central America


Juvenile Merendon Palm-pitviper (Bothriechis thalassinus). 
Photo by Don Church, Global Wildlife Conservation.

Abstract
A new species of green, prehensile-tailed pitviper of the genus Bothriechis is described from the Atlantic slopes of eastern Guatemala and western Honduras. This species appears to be most closely related to B. bicolor of the Pacific versant of Chiapas (Mexico) and Guatemala. Several other species of Bothriechis occur on the Atlantic versant of northern Central America, including two montane species, B. aurifer and B. marchi but, with one possible exception, these are not known to be sympatric with the new species and occur in different mountain ranges. The widespread B. schlegelii occurs up to at least 900 m on the Sierra de Caral, where the lowest elevation recorded for the new species is 885 m.
Key words: Reptilia, Squamata, Viperidae, Pitvipers, Bothriechis, New species, Izabal, Guatemala, Honduras.



Etymology.– The specific epithet is derived from the Greek thalassinos, meaning blue-green, in allusion to the striking coloration of this snake.
Habitat, distributon, and habits.– In Guatemala, this species occurs in Lower Montane Wet Forest (sensu Holdridge 1959) at elevations of 885-1 450 m. In Honduras, it has been recorded to occur also in Lower Montane Moist Forest (Meyer and Wilson 1985) and up to 1 730 m in the mountains east of Nueva Ocotepeque (LSU 23821).




Blue Vipers, Endangered Frogs, and Threatened Birds Protected by New Guatemalan Reserve http://www.abcbirds.org/newsandreports/releases/120529.html

Campbell, J.A. & Smith, E.N. 2000. A new species of arboreal pitviper from the Atlantic versant of northern Central America. Revista de Biologia Tropical. 48: 1001-1013

[News 2012] Establishment: Sierra Caral Amphibian Reserve in Guatemala


Critically Endangered Red-eyed Stream Frog (Duellmanohyla uranochroa)

Conservationists are celebrating the establishment of the new 6,000-acre Sierra Caral Amphibian Reserve in Guatemala, which will protect some of the country’s most endangered wildlife. The reserve is home to a dozen globally threatened frogs and salamanders, five found nowhere else in the world, three species of threatened birds, and the recently discovered Merendon Palm-pitviper (Bothriechis thalassinus), an arboreal, blue-toned viper.
.......
Blue Vipers, Endangered Frogs, and Threatened Birds Protected by New Guatemalan Reserve http://www.abcbirds.org/newsandreports/releases/120529.html

Juvenile Merendon Palm-pitviper (Bothriechis thalassinus). 
Photo by Don Church, Global Wildlife Conservation..

Aerial view of a portion of Guatemala's the new Sierra Caral Amphibian Reserve. 
Photo by Robin Moore/robindmoore.com.

Giant Palm Footed Salamander (Bolitoglossa dofleini). Photo by Robin Moore/robindmoore.com.

Blue Vipers, Endangered Frogs, and Threatened Birds Protected by New Guatemalan Reserve

[Mammalogy • 2012] Adaptive evolution of facial colour patterns in Neotropical primates


Faces of adult male primates from Central and South America. Warmer colors indicate higher complexity in facial color patterns. Species shown are: (1) Cacajao calvus, (2) Callicebus hoffmansi, (3) Ateles belzebuth, (4) Alouatta caraya, (5) Aotus trivirgatus, (6) Cebus nigritus, (7) Saimiri boliviensis, (8) Leontopithecus rosalia, (9) Callithrix kuhli, (10) Saguinus martinsi, and (11) Saguinus imperator
Credit: Stephen Nash

Abstract
The rich diversity of primate faces has interested naturalists for over a century. Researchers have long proposed that social behaviours have shaped the evolution of primate facial diversity. However, the primate face constitutes a unique structure where the diverse and potentially competing functions of communication, ecology and physiology intersect, and the major determinants of facial diversity remain poorly understood. Here, we provide the first evidence for an adaptive role of facial colour patterns and pigmentation within Neotropical primates. Consistent with the hypothesis that facial patterns function in communication and species recognition, we find that species living in smaller groups and in sympatry with a higher number of congener species have evolved more complex patterns of facial colour. The evolution of facial pigmentation and hair length is linked to ecological factors, and ecogeographical rules related to UV radiation and thermoregulation are met by some facial regions. Our results demonstrate the interaction of behavioural and ecological factors in shaping one of the most outstanding facial diversities of any mammalian lineage.

Evolution Is Written All Over Your Face
ScienceDaily (Jan. 11, 2012) — Why are the faces of primates so dramatically different from one another? 
UCLA biologists working as "evolutionary detectives" studied the faces of 129 adult male primates from Central and South America, and they offer some answers in research published Jan. 11, in the early online edition of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The faces they studied evolved over at least 24 million years, they report.
University of California - Los Angeles (2012, January 11). Evolution is written all over your face. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 11, 2012, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2012/01/120111223744.htm

ScienceShot: Why So Many Monkey Faces? : http://bit.ly/xiXRvd 


Sharlene E. Santana, Jessica Lynch Alfaro, and Michael E. Alfaro. 2012. Adaptive evolution of facial colour patterns in Neotropical primates. Proc. R. Soc. B, 279(1736): 2204-2211. DOI:  10.1098/rspb.2011.2326

Primates in Peril: The World's 25 Most Endangered Primates, 2008–2010









Primates in Peril: The World's 25 Most Endangered Primates, 2004–2006



25 Most Endangered Primates Named



Roloway Guenon (Ctte d'Ivoire, Ghana)

Cross River Gorilla (Nigeria, Cameroon)

Western Purple-Faced Langur (Sri Lanka)

Horton Plains Slender Loris (Sri Lanka)


Primates in Peril: The World's 25 Most Endangered Primates, 2004–2006

[Mammalogy • 2008] Cacajao ayresi & C. hosomi • A Taxonomic Reassessment of Cacajao melanocephalus Humboldt (1811), with the Description of Two New Species


Cacajao ayresi & C. hosomi

Abstract  
The author of the last published systematic review of Cacajao recognized 2 subspecies of black-headed uakaris (black uakaris): Cacajao melanocephalus melanocephalus and C. m. ouakary. As a result of a series of black uakari surveys and collecting expeditions to several tributaries of the Rio Negro and of morphological and molecular analyses of museum specimens and specimens we collected during field expeditions, we reassess their taxonomy. We describe a newly discovered species of black uakari from the Rio Aracá, a left bank tributary of the Rio Negro, Amazonas, Brazil. We also show that ouakary is a junior synonym of melanocephalus and provide a new name and a new description for Cacajao melanocephalus melanocephalus in the Pico da Neblina region of Brazil and Venezuela. Based on genetic, morphological, and ecological evidence, we propose that there are 3 species of black uakaris. We named the Rio Aracá species Cacajao ayresi sp. nov. (Ayres uakari) in honor of the late José Márcio Ayres, a pioneer in uakari research and conservation. We named the Neblina black uakari Cacajao hosomi, after the Yanomami word for uakaris. The new taxonomic arrangement provided here implies that the conservation status of black uakaris needs to be reassessed.
Keywords  Amazonia - black-headed uakari - Brazil -  Cacajao melanocephalus  - cytochrome b  - geographic distribution - New World primates - Pithecines - Pleistocene - rain forest - speciation - phylogeny


Boubli, J. P., M. N. F. da Silva, M. V. Amado, T. Hrbek, F. B. Pontual, and I. P. Farias. 2008. A taxonomic reassessment of black uakari monkeys, Cacajao melanocephalus group, Humboldt (1811), with the description of two new species". International Journal of Primatology 29: 723–749. 

New uakari monkey discovered in the Amazon rainforest http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0205-monkey.html

[News 2011] new Callicebus monkey discovered in the Amazon


The new species of monkey discovered on the expedition 
belonged to the 'Callicebus' genus
© Julio Dalponte

Scientists on an expedition backed by WWF-Brazil to one of the last unexplored areas in the Brazilian Mid-west have discovered a new species of monkey.
The monkey belonging to the Callicebus genus was found in the northwest of Mato Grosso State and is one of the great results from the studies undertaken during an expedition in December 2010 to the Guariba-Roosevelt Extractive Reserve.

New Species Monkey discovered in the Amazon http://gu.com/p/3xezv/tw via @guardian
Scientists discover new monkey species in Amazon: http://wwf.panda.org/wwf_news/?201430%2F via @WWF

[Mammalogy • 2010] Callicebus caquetensis | Caquetá titi • a New and Critically Endangered Titi Monkey (Primates: Platyrrhini) from Southern Caquetá, Colombia (Colombian Amazon)

Holotype of Callicebus caquetensis. Young female
The new species of titi monkey: the Caquetá titi (Callicebus caquetensis), discovered in the Colombian Amazon. Photo by: Javier Garcia.

Abstract
We describe a new species of titi monkey Callicebus (Primates: Platyrrhini) from the Department of Caquetá, Colombia, that belongs to the Callicebus cupreus group. Diagnostic characteristics: it is similar in fur color to C. ornatus and C. discolor, but has no white band on the forehead as in C. ornatus and C. discolor, and the hands and feet are not white as they are in C. ornatus. The karyotype of this species is 2n=46, and very similar to that published for C. cupreus. Comparing it to neighboring species, it is more similar cytologically to C. discolor than to C. ornatus. It should be classified as Critically Endangered (CR) due to the severe fragmentation of its habitat and very small population.

Key words: Platyrrhini, Pitheciidae, Callicebus caquetensis, new species, primate, Colombia. 



Figure 3c. Adult Callicebus caquetensis temporarily captured.
Photo by: Javier Garcia.

Figure 5. Four titi monkeys of southern Colombia, Amazonian Ecuador, and northern Peru. Callicebus ornatus, Callicebus discolor, Callicebus cupreus, and the new species described here, Callicebus caquetensis. Illustrations © Stephen D. Nash/Conservation International

Figure 3e. Holotype of Callicebus caquetensis. Young female.


Map of the area where a new species of titi monkey was found in Colombia by Drs Thomas Defler, Marta Bueno and Javier García with support from Conservation International. Illustration by Thomas Defler.


Defler, Thomas R.; Bueno, Marta; Garcia, Javier 2010. Callicebus caquetensis: A New and Critically Endangered Titi Monkey from Southern Caquetá, Colombia. Primate Conservation.

Stunning monkey discovered in the Colombian Amazon http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0811-hance_caquetatiti.html  
Callicebus caquetensis: A New Species of Titi Monkey Discovered http://wp.me/p2983-bw 

[Mammalogy • 2006] Callicebus aureipalatii | Madidi titi • a New Species of Titi Monkey, Genus Callicebus Thomas (Primates, Pitheciidae), from Western Bolivia with Preliminary Notes on Distribution and Abundance



Abstract
This paper describes a new species of titi monkey, Callicebus aureipalatii, recently discovered in the Madidi protected area of northwestern Bolivia. Descriptions are based on observations, photographs and video material, and the subsequent collection of two specimens. Preliminary surveys and notes on habitat associations indicate that C. aureipalatii is limited in distribution to the western side of the Río Beni. It is found in the Andean foothills and immediately adjacent lowland forests. Line transect studies at four sites and subsequent extrapolations based on available suitable habitat suggest that population densities are sufficiently high to ensure the protection of this species within the confines of the Madidi protected area. This finding is discussed with reference to the general lack of knowledge regarding titi monkey distributions in Bolivia.

Keywords: Primates, Madidi, Amazonia, neotropics, river boundaries




Distribution: Western lowlands of Bolivia and probably southern Peru


Wallace, Robert B.; Gómez, Humberto; Felton, Annika; Felton, Adam M. 2006. On a New Species of Titi Monkey, Genus Callicebus Thomas (Primates, Pitheciidae), from Western Bolivia with Preliminary Notes on Distribution and Abundance. Primate Conservation. 20: 36. DOI: 10.1896/0898-6207.20.1.29

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