AMPHIBIAWEB


AmphibiaWeb is an online system that provides access to information on amphibian declines, conservation, natural history, and taxonomy.
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Species of the Week:
Microhyla nepenthicola

Amphibian News!
A tiny new frog (the Old World's smallest) has been discovered living and breeding inside pitcher plants on Borneo. Das and Haas (2010) describe the new species, Microhyla nepenthicola, in the journal Zootaxa. Adult male frogs measure between 10.6 and 12.8 mm in snout-vent length (SVL); new metamorphs measure just 3.5 mm on average (one-third the diameter of a pea). Although pitcher plants are carnivorous and consume insects that fall in, Microhyla nepenthicola tadpoles suffer no ill effects from developing inside the pitcher's digestive liquid. In September, Das will be leading one of a number of Conservation International teams focusing on searching for "lost" amphibian species that have not been seen in the wild for many years.

Current number of amphibian species: 6,700 (Sep 2, 2010)