Atelopus calima Velásquez Trujillo, Castro Herrera, Lötters & Plewnia, 2024
Calima Harlequin Toad, Rana Arlequín de Calima | family: Bufonidae genus: Atelopus |
Species Description: Velásquez Trujillo DA, Castro Herrera F, Lötters S, Plewnia A. 2024. A new species of harlequin toad from the Western Cordillera of Colombia (Bufonidae: Atelopus), with comments on other forms. Salamandra 60: 67–81. | |
Etymology: The species epithet, “calima,” is a dedication to the Calima people, who inhabited the northern Rio Calima religion and its surrounding areas from 1600 BC to 1700 AD. The Calima people held anurans in high regard, depicting them in jewelry, so it’s fitting they be a frog’s namesake (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). |
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Description The fore- and hind limbs are long and slender. The palms have a well-defined, round palmar tubercle and an indistinct thenar tubercle. The relative length of the unwebbed fingers is I < II < IV < III with the first finger being distinctly short, and the phalangeal formula being 2 - 2 - 3 - 3. The subarticular tubercles of the fingers are indistinct. The tips of fingers are rounded, but not expanded. The tibia and foot are about the same length, with both being about 40% of the snout-vent length. There is no tarsal fold and the tarsal tubercle is poorly developed. The inner metatarsal tubercle is indistinct while the outer metatarsal tubercle is round. The relative length of the unfringed toes is I < II < III < V < IV and they have a phalangeal formula 2-2-3-4-3 and a webbing formula I 0 – 1 II 1 – 1 ½ III 1 – 2 ½ IV (2 ½ – 3) – 1 V. The small subarticular tubercles are still distinct and round. The toe tips are also round but not expanded (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). DIAGNOSIS: Atelopus calima can be distinguished from its close relatives by its medium body size, knob-like protuberance on the snout, and a dorsum characterized by scattered warts on the dorsum and spiculated warts on its flanks on an otherwise smooth surface. It is most similar to A. nocturnus and A. sonsonensis, which are central Cordillera endemics. Atelopus calima is also similar to A. carauta, A. chocoensis, A. famelicus, A. galactogaster, A. longirostris, A. lynchi, A. nicefori and A. pictiventris, which are western Cordillera endemics, to A. quimbaya, A. sanjosei and A. sernai, which are also central Cordillera endemics. However, A. calima has a larger body size, lighter flank coloring, and the presence of spiculae on the flanks that distinguish it from A. nocturnus and A. sonsonensis. Atelopus calima can be further differentiated from A. sonsonensis by the former lacking hand webbing and having supertympanic crests directed towards the flanks. Atelopus calima is smaller than A. carauta, A. famelicus, A. galactogaster, A. longirostris, and A. lynchi, but larger than A. sernai. The spiculae in A. calima differentiates from A. carauta, A. chocoensis, A. galactogaster, A. longirostris, A. lynchi, A. nicefori, A. pictiventris, A. quimbaya, and A. sernai, which all lack them, and A. calima has fewer spicules than A. sanjosei. The snout in A. calima is relatively longer than A. chocoensis, A. lynchi, A. nicefori, and A. pictiventris, but shorter than A. galactogaster. The snout is also straighter than A. chocoensis and A. nicefori, and more pointed than A. quimbaya. The knob-like projection in A. calima differentiates it from A. lynchi, A. pictiventris and A. quimbaya, which lack it. And coloration or patterning is different for all of these species. For more comparisons, please see the species authority (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). COLORATION: In life, both sexes have a dark brown dorsum, however, males have cream flanks and ventral area while females have yellowish to orange flanks with brown warts and orange ventral area. The venter may have tiny brown flecks and the throat has a brown wash. The ventral surface of the thighs, shanks, and tips of the feet may also have an off-white pigment. The iris is black with a pale green ring around the pupil (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). In preservative, the dorsum ranges from light to dark brown to reddish brown with dark brown warts. The dorsal coloration darkens towards the tip of the snout and limbs with the head being dark brown. In most cases the lateral regions are generally whitish-cream to light brown with dark warts. The spiculae are whitish. Its ventral area is pale white, cream, or reddish cream with most specimens possessing brown throats and gulars (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). VARIATION: There is some sexual and individual variation with regards to color (please see above). The female specimen is also notably larger and has longer, more slender limbs than males, and males have nuptial pads. Individually, the density of warts differs with some individuals almost completely lacking warts on the dorsum (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). Distribution and Habitat Country distribution from AmphibiaWeb's database: Colombia
Ten similar looking specimens were labelled as collected at Estación Silvicultura Bajo Calima, however, given the much lower elevation (< 100 m.a.s.l) of this site, distance from the type locality, and the lack of other collecting information, the authors are doubtful these specimens have accurate location information (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). Unfortunately, at the time of the species description, A calima had not been seen since July 1994 (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors They appear to mate during the beginning of the early rainy season as one amplectant pair was found in March 1988 (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). At least 20 sympatric amphibians are known from the same area that A. calima is known from. They include the endemic species: Andinobates bombetes, Centrolene savagei, Pristimantis deinops, P. juanchoi, Strabomantis cerastes, and S. ruizi (Velásquez-Trujillo et al. 2024). Trends and Threats Possible reasons for amphibian decline General habitat alteration and loss Comments References Originally submitted by: Rory Platt (2025-01-27) Description by: Rory Platt, Ann T. Chang (updated 2025-01-27)
Distribution by: Rory Platt, Ann T. Chang (updated 2025-01-27)
Life history by: Rory Platt, Ann T. Chang (updated 2025-01-27)
Trends and threats by: Rory Platt (updated 2025-01-27)
Comments by: Rory Platt (updated 2025-01-27)
Edited by: Ann T. Chang (2025-01-27) Species Account Citation: AmphibiaWeb 2025 Atelopus calima: Calima Harlequin Toad <https://amphibiaweb.org/species/9841> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed May 9, 2025.
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Citation: AmphibiaWeb. 2025. <https://amphibiaweb.org> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed 9 May 2025. AmphibiaWeb's policy on data use. |