Diasporus lynchi Ospina Sarria, Velásquez Trujillo, Castaño Saavedra, Castillo & Bolívar-García, 2022
Anchicaya’s Golden Frog | family: Eleutherodactylidae subfamily: Eleutherodactylinae genus: Diasporus |
Species Description: Ospina Sarria JJ, Velásquez Trujillo DA, Castaño Saavedra CO, Castillo LF, Bolívar-García W. 2022. A new golden species of Diasporus (Anura: Eleutherodactylidae) from southwestern Colombia, with evaluation of the phylogenetic significance of morphological characters in Diasporus. PeerJ 10:e12765. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12765. | |
Etymology: The specific name, “lynchi”, is a patronym serving to honor John D. Lynch, who discovered the species during his explorations of the Bajo Calima region. Dr. Lynch also made significant contributions to understanding the taxonomy and systematics of the superfamily Brachycephaloidea, the most diverse family-group of amphibians also known as Terraranae (Ospina Sarria et al. 2022). |
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Description DIAGNOSIS: Diasporus lynchi exhibits several distinct characteristics within the genus. It displays a yellowish coloration in life and possesses two chrome orange spots (resembling gland-like protrusions) in the sacral region. The species also stands out due to its smooth ventral skin, basal webbing between the toes, and minute papillae on the disc covers of fingers II - IV and toes II - IV (Ospina Sarria et al. 2022). More specifically, the yellowish coloration in life necessitates a comparison with D. citrinobapheus, D. gularis, and D. tigrillo, which display similar coloration. Most prominently, D. lynchi can be differentiated from these species by the presence of two distinctive chrome orange spots in the sacral region. Additionally, D. lynchi exhibits basal webbing between the toes, while the tips of the disc covers on fingers II - IV and toes II - IV possess papillae (neither character is present in D. citrinobapheus and D. tigrillo). Basal webbing between the toes and small papillae on toes II - IV are features shared by D. lynchi and D. gularis. However, D. lynchi is further distinguished by its smooth ventral skin (vs. areolate ventral skin of D. gularis) and internal choanae partially concealed by the palatal shelf of the maxillary arch (vs. unconcealed choanae in D. gularis; Ospina Sarria et al. 2022). In comparison to other congenic species, D. lynchi is readily identified by the presence of basal webbing between the toes (absent in D. amirae, D. anthrax, D. darienensis, D. diastema, D. igneus, D. majeensis, D. pequeno, D. sapo, and D. ventrimaculatus); prominent dentigerous processes of the vomers (absent in D. vocator and D. hylaeformis); and the nearly transparent venter with scattered iridophores, which is distinct from the brown venter with cream flecks in D. quidditus and the gray to dark brown venter with white blotches in D. tinker (Ospina Sarria et al. 2022). COLORATION: In life, D. lynchi exhibits a yellow dorsal color with dark markings, while the anterior and posterior surfaces of the thighs are chrome orange. Perhaps its most distinctive feature is the two chrome orange spots in the sacral region, appearing as gland-like protrusions. Canthal, interorbital, and postocular stripes are black, but not well defined. The limbs feature dark markings and the disc covers appear blackish gray. Ventral surfaces of the body are almost transparent with scattered iridophores, while the ventral surfaces of the hind limbs exhibit a chrome orange hue. Palmar and plantar surfaces are dark gray and the digit pads are pale gray. The vocal sac is pale yellow with small black spots. The iris is golden-bronze with a reddish-brown horizontal streak (Ospina Sarria et al. 2022). In preservative, the vibrant yellow and orange hues of D. lynchi fade into a dull yellow tone. However, the black reticulations on the dorsum, blackish gray coloration on the upper surfaces of the discs, and dark gray shade on the palmar and plantar surfaces keep their original appearance (Ospina Sarria et al. 2022). Distribution and Habitat Country distribution from AmphibiaWeb's database: Colombia
Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors Comments PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS: The phylogenetic analyses are based on DNA sequences of two mitochondrial genes (16S and COI), and one nuclear gene (RAG-1) revealed that D. lynchi is the sister taxon to a clade that contains D. gularis, D. tigrillo, D. diastema (including two populations assumed to be this species), and D. citrinobapheus, albeit with low support. Based on uncorrected p-distances, D. lynchi shows relatively high genetic differentiation to other species of Diasporus, 5.56 - 8.72% (Ospina Sarria et al. 2022).References Originally submitted by: Matt Mullahy (2023-10-05) Description by: Matt Mullahy (updated 2023-10-05)
Distribution by: Matt Mullahy (updated 2023-10-05)
Life history by: Matt Mullahy (updated 2023-10-05)
Comments by: Matt Mullahy (updated 2023-10-05)
Edited by: Ann T. Chang, James Hanken (2024-08-22) Species Account Citation: AmphibiaWeb 2024 Diasporus lynchi: Anchicaya’s Golden Frog <https://amphibiaweb.org/species/9692> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed Feb 4, 2025.
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Citation: AmphibiaWeb. 2025. <https://amphibiaweb.org> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed 4 Feb 2025. AmphibiaWeb's policy on data use. |