Raorchestes rezakhani Al-Razi, Maria & Muzaffar, 2020
Reza Khan's bush frog | family: Rhacophoridae subfamily: Rhacophorinae genus: Raorchestes |
Species Description: Al-Razi H, Maria M, Muzaffar SB (2020) A new species of cryptic Bush frog (Anura, Rhacophoridae, Raorchestes) from northeastern Bangladesh. ZooKeys 927: 127–151. | |
Etymology: The species was named after Dr. Mohammad Ali Reza Khan who is a pioneer of wildlife research in Bangladesh (Al-Razi et al. 2020). |
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Description DIAGNOSIS: Raorchestes rezakhani is comparatively smaller in size than R. amboli, R. anili, R. charius, R. chlorosomma, R. crustai, R. flaviventris, R. glandulosus, R. gryllus, R. jayarami, R. johnceei, R. kaikatti,R. kakachi, R. luteolus, R. munnarensis, R. nerostagona, R. ochlandrae, R. ponmudi, R. sahai, R. signatus, R. sushili, R. theuerkaufi, R. thodai, and R. wynaadensis. Alternatively, R. rezakhani is comparatively larger than R. garo, R. kempiae and R. shillongensis. The sub-elliptical snout in R. rezakhani differentiates it from more pointed snouts in R. annandalii, R. gryllus, R. longchuanensis, and R. tuberohumerus (Al-Razi et al. 2020). A wider than long head in R. rezakhani differentiates it from R. annandalii, R. dulongensis, R. longchuanensis, R. menglaensis, and R. shillongensis, which have either longer than wide heads or lengths and widths that are almost equal. Having a snout that is shorter than eye diameter sets R. rezakhani apart from R. sahai, and R. shillongensis, which have slightly longer snouts. Raorchestes rezakhani has nostrils that are closer to the snout than eye, which differentiates it from R. annandalii, R. garo, R. kempiae, and R. sahai, which all have nostrils that are equidistant from the eye and snout tip. Having a longer eye diameter than interorbital length differentiates R. rezakhani from R. annandalii, R. garo, R. huanglianshan, R. longchuanensis, R. malipoensis, R. menglaensis, R. sahai and R. tuberohumerus. An external single subgular vocal sac in R. rezakhani distinguishes it from the internal single subgular vocal sac in R. menglaensis. Indistinct tympanums in R. rezakhani differentiate them from R. andersoni, R. annandalii, R. dulongensis, R. garo, R. hillisi, R. huanglianshan, R. longchuanensis, R. kempiae, R. malipoensis, R. manipurensis, R. parvulus, R. sahai, and R. shillongensis. And the complete absence of metacarpal and metatarsal tubercles in R. rezakhani distinguishes it from R. annandalii, R. garo, R. longchuanensis, R. parvulus, and R. tuberohumerus, which have inner metatarsal tubercles, and R. menglaensis, which has an outer metatarsal tubercle (Al-Razi et al. 2020, Wu et al. 2021, Huang et al. 2023, please see these articles for more comparisons). COLORATION: The overall coloration of R. rezakhani is brown to brownish green in life. Dorsally, they are darker greyish-brown with some small dark brown spots. They also have either a black “)(” or “)-(” shaped marking on their backs. Ventrally, they are a lighter brown color than they are dorsally with small dark brown spots. Their snout, tympanum, and loreal region are a darker color than the rest of their body, and they have a black line between their eyelids. The hind limbs have multiple black bars on them, and the forelimbs have just one band. Their finger and toe discs may be whitish or reddish. The webbing on their feet is gray. Ventrally they are pale white including their vocal sacs, which are also transparent with very few small black spots (Al-Razi et al. 2020). In preservative, most of their colors are lightened from their original state. Their backs become dark gray with brown spots instead of black spots. The tympanum and loreal region also become lighter. The bars on the limbs are retained. Both their webbing and ventrum are creamy white. The bottoms of the feet and hands are light gray and have small black specks (Al-Razi et al. 2020). VARIATION: Only males were collected by the species authority, so the existence of sexual dimorphism is unknown for this species. The individuals were quite similar, aside from their size and some parts of their coloration. For instance, one male was significantly smaller than the other three specimens. Also, they differed in the number of dark gray markings on their ventral surface. Lastly, on their back, three of the four individuals have a pattern that looks similar to “)(”, while the final specimen’s pattern is shaped like “)-(” (Al-Razi et al. 2020). Distribution and Habitat Country distribution from AmphibiaWeb's database: Bangladesh
Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors They appear to be most active during the rainy season, from April to August, during which males vocalize. They have been found on hilly slopes, vocalizing from the leaves and branches of small trees and from bamboo trunks 1.0 - 1.5 m above the ground (Al-Razi et al. 2020). Their calls sound similar to cricket calls to the human ear. A single recorded call had a dominant frequency of 4.32 - 4.77 kHz and a duration of 16 seconds at an ambient air temperature of 27.8 °C and 97% relative humidity. The call had 25 notes, with each note lasting 0.183 - 0.379 s and having 5 - 11 pulses. Pulses had a duration of 0.003 – 0.029 s with an interpulse interval of 0.005 – 0.127 s resulting in a pulse rate of 10 – 19 per second. The internote interval was 0.222 – 0.592 s and the length of the intervals increased as the call progressed (Al-Razi et al. 2020). Reproductive behavior was not observed in the collected specimens. However, in captivity, the closely related species R. longchuanensis was observed to lay two clutches of 10 - 12 eggs each, and the eggs hatched after 25 - 30 days (Yan et al. 2021). Larva Trends and Threats Possible reasons for amphibian decline General habitat alteration and loss Comments PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS: The Raorchestes genus has a high diversification rate with many cryptic species, making some phylogenetic relationships challenging to determine (Wu et al. 2021). During the initial species description, Bayesian Inference and Maximum Likelihood analyses on 16S rRNA were performed. The resulting phylogeny found that R. rezakhani was a distinct lineage but placed it in a polytomy with six other clades: i) R. bombayensis, R. sanctisilvaticus, and R. tuberohumerus, ii) R. menglaensis, and R. parvulus, iii) R. gryllus, iv) R. shillongensis, v) R. ghati, vi) and R. longchuanensis (Al-Razi et al. 2020). Since then, another phylogenetic study, using Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood analyses, which also included R. rezakhani, was conducted with 16S rRNA and ND1 to describe R. dulongensis. This study also placed R. rezakhani in a polytomy, but with R. andersoni, R. annandalii, and R. cangyuanensis instead. This clade formed a further polytomy with two other clades, the first composed of R. dulongensis, a species presumed to be R. gryllus, and R. longchuanensis. The second clade was composed of R. shillongensis and an undescribed Raorchestes (Wu et al. 2021).References Huang, J., Liu, X. L., Du, L., Bernstein, J. M., Liu, S., Yang, Y., Yu, G., and Wu, Z. (2023). A new species of Bush frog (Anura, Rhacophoridae, Raorchestes) from southeastern Yunnan, China. ZooKeys 1151, 47–65. [link] IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group. 2022. Raorchestes rezakhani. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022: e.T178806889A194319221. https://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2022-2.RLTS.T178806889A194319221.en. Accessed on 27 February 2023. Wu, Y.-H., Liu, X.-L., Gao, W., Wang, Y.-F., Li, Y.-C., Zhou, W.-W., Yuan, Z.-Y., and Che, J. (2021). Description of a new species of bush frog (Anura: Rhacophoridae: Raorchestes) from northwestern Yunnan, China. Zootaxa, 4941(2), 239–258. [link] Yan, F., Liu, X., Zhang, Y., and Yuan, Z. (2021). Direct development of the bush frog Raorchestes longchuanensis (Yang and Li 1978) under laborary conditions in Southern China. Journal of Natural History, 55(1–2), 125–132. [link]
Originally submitted by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma (2024-05-09) Description by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma, Ann T. Chang (updated 2024-05-09)
Distribution by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma (updated 2024-05-09)
Life history by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma, Lori Pradhan, Anika Freimuth, Allen Chew (updated 2024-05-09)
Larva by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma (updated 2024-05-09)
Trends and threats by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma (updated 2024-05-09)
Comments by: Katie Gorden, Maggie Bourda, Taryn Mitoma, Ann T. Chang (updated 2024-05-09)
Edited by: Ann T. Chang (2024-08-22) Species Account Citation: AmphibiaWeb 2024 Raorchestes rezakhani: Reza Khan's bush frog <https://amphibiaweb.org/species/9169> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed Dec 1, 2024.
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Citation: AmphibiaWeb. 2024. <https://amphibiaweb.org> University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. Accessed 1 Dec 2024. AmphibiaWeb's policy on data use. |