Odontobatrachus

Odontobatrachus is a genus of frogs comprising the family Odontobatrachidae. In a 2014 research project Barej, Rödel, Loader & Schmitz separated the genus from the established genus Petropedetes and separated the new family from the established family Petropedetidae.[1][2][3]

Odontobatrachus
Odontobatrachus arndti, Ivory Coast
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Suborder: Neobatrachia
Clade: Ranoidea
Family: Odontobatrachidae
Genus: Odontobatrachus
Barej et al., 2014

Taxonomy and affinities

The species had originally been assigned to the genus Petropedetes in the Petropedetidae, a family of so-called torrent frogs of Africa, so the type species is Petropedetes natator Boulenger, 1905. However, recent morphological and genomic investigation showed the species not only to be cladistically alien to the Petropedetidae, but to all other existing anuran families as well. Furthermore, the family Odontobatrachidae turned out to be fairly ancient, estimated to have originated in the mid-Cretaceous period, some 80 Ma 90 Ma ago. Consequently, a new family and genus were assigned, respectively Odontobatrachidae and Odontobatrachus. The details of the evolutionary history of the taxon however, still are open to alternative lines of interpretation.[4]

Description

Like many species of tadpoles inhabiting fast-flowing mountain streams, the larvae of Odontobatrachus are streamlined, with a flattened body shape, and with large sucker-like mouths adapted to attachment to rocks in defiance of powerful currents.

Differential diagnosis of adult Odontobatrachus is supported by a range of features that distinguish the species from other local species of Anura, and from the Petropedetidae in particular. In external appearance they are moderate-sized frogs with a body length of up to about 65 mm. The skin is granular in texture with glandular ridges. There is no lateral line organ, but nuptial pads are present in the male. The maxillae (upper jaws) are densely set with sharply pointed, somewhat recurved teeth, some of them also occurring on the vomer. In contrast each mandible bears just one large, sharply pointed recurved odontoid tusk.[5] It has been confirmed that Odontobatrachus do at least on occasion swallow frogs, but it is not certain whether their dentition reflects their being either specialist or opportunistic predators of relatively large frogs.[6]

The Petropedetidae differ from Odontobatrachus in several ways, including that they lack tusks on the mandibles and that they either lack vocal sacs, or, if they have one it is median; Odontobatrachus has lateral vocal sacs.

Species

O. smithi, Guinea
  • Odontobatrachus arndti Barej et al., 2015
  • Odontobatrachus fouta Barej et al., 2015
  • Odontobatrachus natator (Boulenger, 1905)
  • Odontobatrachus smithi Barej et al., 2015
  • Odontobatrachus ziama Barej, et al. 2015

Distribution and habitat

Odontobatrachus occurs in the upper Guinean forests, Liberia, Sierra Leone, western parts of the Ivory Coast.[4] They frequent forested country close to mountain streams with strong currents and rapids. The distribution is patchy, but where the species does occur it often is plentiful. Human settlements and activities such as logging, agriculture and mining pose ecological threats to the species, causing the loss of forest habitat, though there are some conserved areas.[7]

References

  1. Barej, Michael F; Schmitz, Andreas; Günther, Rainer; Loader, Simon P; Mahlow, Kristin; Rödel, Mark-Oliver (2014). "The first endemic West African vertebrate family – a new anuran family highlighting the uniqueness of the Upper Guinean biodiversity hotspot". Frontiers in Zoology. 11 (1): 8. doi:10.1186/1742-9994-11-8. ISSN 1742-9994.
  2. "Odontobatrachidae". Amphibian Species of the World. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  3. "Odontobatrachidae". AmphibiaWeb. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  4. Barej, Michael F. Schmitz, Andreas. Günther, Rainer. Loader, Simon P. Mahlow, Kristin. Rödel, Mark-Oliver. The first endemic West African vertebrate family – a new anuran family highlighting the uniqueness of the Upper Guinean biodiversity hotspot. Frontiers in Zoology 2014, 11:8
  5. Barej, Michael F. Schmitz, Andreas. Günther, Rainer. Loader, Simon P. Mahlow, Kristin. Rödel, Mark-Oliver. The first endemic West African vertebrate family – a new anuran family highlighting the uniqueness of the Upper Guinean biodiversity hotspot; Additional file. [www.biomedcentral.com/content/supplementary/1742-9994-11-8-S1.pdf]
  6. Steiner, Gesine. Pressestelle. Museum für Naturkunde - Leibniz-Institut für Evolutions- und Biodiversitätsforschung. 02/04/2014 10:26
  7. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013.2 Petropedetes natator (Sierra Leone Water Frog)
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