Digimorph, An NSF Digital Library at UT Austin, Texas
help
DigiMorph
Browse the Library by:
 Scientific Names
 Common Names
 What's Popular?
Learn More
Overview Pages
A Production of

Haddadus binotatus, Clay Robber Frog
Dr. Blaire Hedges - Pennsylvania State University
Haddadus binotatus
Click for help
skull
Click for more information

University of Kansas Natural History Museum (KU 92808)

Image processing: Dr. Jessie Maisano
Publication Date: 16 Aug 2012

ITIS TNS Google MSN

The imagery on this page is the subject of a paper entitled A new frog family (Anura: Terrarana) from South America and an expanded direct-developing clade revealed by molecular phylogeny by M.P. Heinicke, W.E.Duellman, L. Trueb, D.B. Means, R.D. MacCulloch, and S.B. Hedges (Zootaxa, 2211, 1-35, 2009). The abstract is as follows:

Three frogs of a new species found in cloud forests on two nearby mountains in Guyana were included in a molecular phylogeny of 17 nuclear and mitochondrial genes (10,739 aligned sites) that revealed that their closest relative is Terrarana (Brachycephalidae, Craugastoridae, Eleutherodactylidae, and Strabomantidae) and their next-closest relative is Hemiphractidae (marsupial frogs). We place these frogs in a new family, genus, and species which is strongly supported as the basal clade within Terrarana: Ceuthomantidae n. fam., Ceuthomantis smaragdinus n. gen, n. sp. Morphological evidence supports the placement of two other species from the Guiana Highlands, Pristimantis aracamuni (Barrio-Amorós & Molina) and P. cavernibardus (Myers & Donnelly), in the new family and genus. This close phylogenetic relationship of terraranans and marsupial frogs, nearly all of which have direct development, supports an hypothesis that direct development evolved early in the evolution of this huge clade (~1000 species), for which we propose the unranked taxonomic epithet Orthobatrachia.

About the Species

This specimen was collected from Rio de Janeiro, Tijuca, Guanabara, Brazil. It was scanned at the Center for Quantitative Imaging at Pennsylvania State University for Dr. Blaire Hedges.

About this Specimen

The specimen was scanned with an interslice spacing of 0.049 mm, an interpixel spacing of 0.046 mm, and a 47.35 mm field of view.

About the
Scan
Links

Haddadus binotatus page on AmphibiaWeb

Literature
& Links

None available.

Additional
Imagery

To cite this page: Dr. Blaire Hedges, 2012, "Haddadus binotatus" (On-line), Digital Morphology. Accessed April 19, 2024 at http://digimorph.org/specimens/Haddadus_binotatus/.

©2002-20019 - UTCT/DigiMorph Funding by NSF
Comments