谷歌浏览器插件
订阅小程序
在清言上使用

The Tadpole of Ameerega Boehmei in Southeastern Bolivia.

Zootaxa(2019)

引用 1|浏览12
暂无评分
摘要
To date, half (16 of 32) of the species of Ameerega have had their tadpoles described: A. altamazonica, A. bassleri, A. bilinguis, A. braccata, A. cainarachi, A. flavopicta, A. hahneli, A. macero, A. parvula, A. petersi, A. picta, A. rubriventris, A shihuemoy. A. silverstonei, A. smaragdina, and A. trivittata (Lescure, 1976; Silverstone, 1976; Duellman, 1978; Myers Daly, 1979; Rodriguez Myers, 1993; Haddad Martins, 1994; Lötters et al., 1997; Duellman, 2005; Costa et al., 2006; Twomey Brown, 2008; Brown Twomey, 2009; Poelman et al., 2010; Schulze et al., 2015). Ameerega boehmei is a putative member of a clade containing Ameerega braccata, A. flavopicta, A. berohoka, A. munduruku, all of which inhabit various parts of the 'dry diagonal' between the Amazon and Atlantic rainforests (Prado Gibbs, 1993). Adult frogs in this group are morphologically similar, generally dark-bodied with yellow dorsolateral stripes, orange flash marks and some also possessing bright-yellow dorsal spots. Despite considerable research on their breeding behavior, acoustics and systematics (Lötters et al., 2009; Forti et al., 2013), the tadpole of Ameerega boehmei, the southern-most and western-most distributed species in this tentative group, has not been described.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Adaptive Evolution
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要