AmphibiaWeb - Pseudacris brachyphona
AMPHIBIAWEB

 

(Translations may not be accurate.)

Pseudacris brachyphona (Cope, 1889)
Mountain Chorus Frog
family: Hylidae
subfamily: Hylinae
genus: Pseudacris
Pseudacris brachyphona
© 2020 Jake Hutton (1 of 23)
Conservation Status (definitions)
IUCN Red List Status Account Least Concern (LC)
NatureServe Use NatureServe Explorer to see status.
CITES No CITES Listing
National Status None
Regional Status None
conservation needs Access Conservation Needs Assessment Report .

   

 
Berkeley mapper logo

View distribution map in BerkeleyMapper.
amphibiandisease logo View Bd and Bsal data (1 records).

bookcover The following account is modified from Amphibian Declines: The Conservation Status of United States Species, edited by Michael Lannoo (©2005 by the Regents of the University of California), used with permission of University of California Press. The book is available from UC Press.

Pseudacris brachyphona (Cope, 1889)
Mountain Chorus Frog

Joseph C. Mitchell1
Thomas K. Pauley2

1. Historical versus Current Distribution. The historical range of mountain chorus frogs (Pseudacris brachyphona) was undoubtedly wider than is currently known due to the occurrence of disjunct populations in several states (Hoffman, 1980). Current distribution is primarily in the Appalachian Plateau Physiographic Province from central western Pennsylvania southwestward through the Appalachians to southwestern Georgia, central Alabama, and northeastern Mississippi (Hoffman, 1980).

2. Historical versus Current Abundance. Green (1952) estimated 1,069–1,815 individuals in ten pools over a 4-yr period in West Virginia. McClure (1996) examined three of Green's pools in 1993 (the other sites had been destroyed) and estimated population sizes of 6–116.

3. Life History Features. The life history and ecology of mountain chorus frogs has been summarized by Green (1938, 1964), Wright and Wright (1949), Barbour (1957, 1971), and Green and Pauley (1987).

A. Breeding. Reproduction is aquatic.

i. Breeding migrations. Green (1952) observed mass movements of breeding frogs at the beginning of the breeding season. Initiation of the calling period depends on temperature, but usually begins in late February to early March after males emerge from terrestrial hibernacula (Green, 1964). Males call from the edges of pools and do not conceal themselves as do most other species in this genus. Calling periods are sporadic in winter, occurring during warm spells in January. Breeding activity occurs late February to early June in West Virginia (Green, 1964) and mid February to May in Kentucky (Barbour, 1971). Males will also call periodically throughout the summer, returning to breeding sites after each rainfall (Green and Pauley, 1987).

ii. Breeding habitat. Mountain chorus frogs breed in shallow wetlands at elevations from about 365–1,341 m (Green, 1938; Hoffman, 1981; Pauley, 1993a). Habitats include temporary pools, roadside ditches, pools in roadruts, mountaintop bogs, furrows in plowed fields, seepages, and woodland springs.

B. Eggs.

i. Egg deposition sites. Females arrive at breeding sites after males, select a mate, and lay eggs attached to vegetation in several eggs masses containing 10–50 eggs or on the bottom of the pool unattached to vegetation. More have been laid unattached than attached (T.K.P., unpublished data).

ii. Clutch size. Total clutch size is 300–1,500 (Green, 1938; Barbour, 1971). Dates of egg laying are 20 March–2 July (Green, 1938). Hoffman (1955, 1981) found egg masses in southwestern Virginia on 30 March and 1 July. Barbour (1971) found egg masses at a high elevation site in August. Females leave breeding sites the same night of egg laying (Green, 1964).

C. Larvae/Metamorphosis. Eggs hatch in about 7–10 d; the larval period is short, lasting about 30–64 d, depending on temperature (Green, 1938; Barbour, 1971). Newly metamorphosed animals were found on 2 June in West Virginia, and size at metamorphosis was 11–13 mm SVL (Green, 1964; Green and Pauley, 1987).

D. Juvenile Habitat. Similar to adult habitats.

E. Adult Habitat. Green (1952) determined that mountain chorus frogs move downhill to breeding pools. He found that males move between pools during the breeding season. Maximum distance traveled was 610 m within the same season, and 1,219 m between breeding seasons. Mountain chorus frogs presumably move upslope after the breeding season to forage and seek shelter in surrounding terrestrial habitats.

F. Home Range Size. Unknown.

G. Territories. Unknown.

H. Aestivation/Avoiding Dessication. Unknown.

I. Seasonal Migrations. Mountain chorus frogs migrate from breeding sites to foraging sites and shelters on hillsides in the forest after the breeding season.

J. Torpor (Hibernation). Overwintering sites are underground (Green, 1964).

K. Interspecific Associations/Exclusions. Brimley's chorus frogs are sympatric with American toads (Bufo americanus), Fowler's toads (B. fowleri), northern cricket frogs (Acris crepitans), southeastern chorus frogs (P. feriarum), spring peepers (P. crucifer), southern chorus frogs (P. nigrita), Cope's gray treefrog (Hyla chrysoscelis), eastern gray treefrogs (H. versicolor), American bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana), green frogs (R. clamitans), pickerel frogs (R. palustris), southern leopard frogs (R. sphenocephala), and wood frogs (R. sylvatica; Barbour, 1957; Hoffman, 1981).

Experimental hybrids between mountain chorus frogs and Brimley's chorus frogs (P. brimleyi), southern cricket frogs, Strecker's chorus frogs (P. streckeri), and southeastern chorus frogs were obtained by Mecham (1965). A natural hybrid between mountain chorus frogs and southeastern chorus frogs was collected by Mecham in Alabama.

L. Age/Size at Reproductive Maturity. The smallest male measured 22 mm; the smallest female, 28 mm (Green, 1964). Age at first reproduction is unknown.

M. Longevity. Unknown.

N. Feeding Behavior. The diet of mountain chorus frogs consists of ants, beetles, true bugs, leaf hoppers, flies, lepidopteran larvae, earthworms, centipedes, and spiders (Green and Pauley, 1987). Most prey were terrestrial species.

O. Predators. Barbour (1957) reported a mountain chorus frog in the stomach of an American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) from Kentucky.

P. Anti-Predator Mechanisms. Unknown.

Q. Diseases. Unknown.

R. Parasites. Unknown.

4. Conservation. There is a single record for this species in North Carolina (Schwartz, 1955). That state lists mountain chorus frogs as a Species of Special Concern and historical, given that it has not been seen since the original observation. Deforestation, urbanization, and loss of floodplain pools have apparently caused a decline in appropriate habitat (Murdock, 1994). Mountain chorus frogs are not listed in any other state where they occur, but regulations in Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Virginia restrict commercialization (Levell, 1997).

1Joseph C. Mitchell
Department of Biology
University of Richmond
Richmond, Virginia 23173
jmitchel@richmond.edu

2Thomas K. Pauley
Department of Biological Sciences
Marshall University
Huntington, West Virginia 25701
pauley@marshall.edu

And:
Allegheny Institute of Natural History
University of Pittsburgh at Bradford
Bradford, Pennsylvania 16701



Literature references for Amphibian Declines: The Conservation Status of United States Species, edited by Michael Lannoo, are here.

Feedback or comments about this page.

 

Citation: AmphibiaWeb. 2024. <https://amphibiaweb.org> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed 28 Nov 2024.

AmphibiaWeb's policy on data use.