Boophis popi Köhler, Glaw, Rosa, Gehring, Pabijan, Andreone & Vences, 2011
Subgenus: Boophis | family: Mantellidae subfamily: Boophinae genus: Boophis |
Species Description: Koehler J, Glaw F, Rosa GM, Gehring P-S, Pabijan M, Andreone F, Vences M. 2011. Two new bright-eyed treefrogs of the genus Boophis from Madagascar. Salamandra 47:207-221. |
© 2015 Devin Edmonds (1 of 3) |
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Description The moderately slender front limbs have lateral fringes in life that are unrecognizable in preservative. There is a small dermal appendage in life that is also indistinct in preservative. The first finger has an unkeratinized nuptial pad and the relative finger lengths are 1 < 2 < 4 < 3. The fingers end in circular pads and have minimal webbing following the formula, (--), 2i (--), 2e (1), 3i (2), 3e (1.5), 4 (1). The single subarticular tubercle per finger is round and the inner palmar tubercle is distinct. The hind limbs are long and slender. When adpressed to the body, the tibotarsal articulation reaches the tip of the snout. There is a distinct small pointed dermal appendage on the heel. The relative toe lengths are 1 < 2 < 3 = 5 < 4. The toes end in circular pads and also have minimal webbing with following the formula, 1(0), 2i (1), 2e (0), 3i (1), 3e (0), 4i (1.5), 4e (1.5), 5 (0.5). There is no outer metatarsal tubercle, but the inner metatarsal tubercle is a moderately distinct, small, elongated (Kohler et al. 2011). The dorsal side of the leg has distinct tubercles in life but is glossy and smooth after being preserved The skin on the throat, chest, and ventral surfaces of the thighs is smooth. The belly is granular. There are prominent tubercles around the cloaca (Kohler et al. 2011). Morphologically, B. popi is most similar to B. axelmeyeri but the former is smaller and has a less pointed snout in the dorsal view. Boophis popi can be differentiated from the known members of B. goudoti group based on genetic differences. Morphologically, it is smaller than B. goudoti, B. obscurus, B. periegetes, B. madagascariensis, B. roseipalmatus, B. brachychir, B. entingae, and B. spinophis. Additionally, the red eye with blue periphery distinguishes B. popi from those species as well as from, B. bugeri and B. reticulatus. Boophis popi can be differentiated from B. boehmei and B. quasiboehmei by a combination of larger size and distinct reticulations on the dorsum of the first. From B. rufioculis the focal species can be differentiated by having smaller cloacal tubercles and shorter hindlimbs that only reach the tip snout rather than beyond (Kohler et al. 2011). In life, the dorsal surfaces of head and body are brown and spotted with black dots on the flanks and posterior portion of the body. There are also some small beige spots with indistinct edges on the body. The flanks have brown and yellow marbling and the limbs, hands, and fingers have distinct, dark brown transverse bands. The tips of the fingers 1 and 4 have white and brown marbling. The throat and chest are marbled with beige and grey. The belly is light brown with small darker spots. The background of the ventral surfaces of the limbs is grey with dense brown spots. The nuptial pad is yellowish. The tubercles around the cloaca are white. Behind and below the eye, there is a distinct bright white spot about 1 mm in diameter. The distinct eye is composed of many colors. The inner iris is a brownish ring with brown vessel-like reticulations. The outer iris is orange-red and stretched toward the dorsum. A black ring encircles the orange-red portion and, outside of the black ring, the posterior portion of the iris is blue (Kohler et al. 2011). In preservative, the dorsal surfaces of the head and body become a darker brown. The tympanic region is light brown. The transverse bands become less distinct but are still dark brown. The spot posteroventral to the eye is still distinct. The throat and chest become whitish brown with great spots. The belly fades to light grey with brown and grey marbled spots. The yellow coloration on the flanks becomes whitish and the grey on the ventral surface of the thighs and shanks becomes cream. The ventral surfaces of the tarsus and feet are dark brown (Kohler et al. 2011). Dorsal coloration and marking pattern vary slightly. In preservative, specimens may be lighter in color. The white spot below the eye can be less distinct or completely absent. The blue in the iris may also appear in the anterior region of the eye (Kohler et al. 2011). Distribution and Habitat Country distribution from AmphibiaWeb's database: Madagascar
Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors Advertisement calls were recorded on 16 January 1994 in Imaitso Forest, Andrigitra at air temperatures of 19oC. Males produced calls of 2 - 3 notes with note durations lasting between 18 – 29 ms, inter-note intervals lasting 97 - 120 ms, and dominant frequencies between 1800 – 3000 Hz. Maximum call energy was 2120 – 2320 Hz. The calls were similar to other frogs in the B. goudoti group but of comparatively lower frequency due to their larger body size. Kohler et al. (2011) note that the vocalization is not a good indicator of B. popi due to too much of a similarity between related species. In late April, one tadpole, identified by DNA barcoding, was found in a rainforest stream with a sandy bottom in Tsinjoarivo (Kohler et al. 2011). Trends and Threats Possible reasons for amphibian decline General habitat alteration and loss Comments Based on Bayesian analysis of mitochondrial 16S rRNA from species of the B. goudoti group, B. popi is part of the B. goudoti group and sister to the clade formed from B. boehmei and B. fayi. However this relationship is not strongly supported (<95% posterior probability). The clade from those three species is sister to B. quasiboehmei with a posterior probability of 100% (Kohler et al. 2011). Name dedicated to German company, “pop-interactive GmbH” because of their support of conservation and biodiversity research by the BIOPAT initiative (Kohler et al. 2011).
References
IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group. 2015. Boophis popi. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2015: e.T49543547A49543610. http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2015-4.RLTS.T49543547A49543610.en. Downloaded on 1 June 2016 Köhler, J., Glaw, F., Rosa, G. M., Gehring, P. S., Pabijan, M., Andreone, F., Vences, M. (2011). "Two new bright-eyed treefrogs of the genus Boophis from Madagascar." Salamandra, 47(4), 207-221. [link] Originally submitted by: Nestor Gutierrez and Ann T. Chang (first posted 2017-02-11) Edited by: Ann T. Chang (2017-02-19) Species Account Citation: AmphibiaWeb 2017 Boophis popi <https://amphibiaweb.org/species/7737> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed Nov 26, 2024.
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Citation: AmphibiaWeb. 2024. <https://amphibiaweb.org> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed 26 Nov 2024. AmphibiaWeb's policy on data use. |