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1 March 2008 SPOTTED POISON FROGS: REDISCOVERY OF A LOST SPECIES AND A NEW GENUS (ANURA: DENDROBATIDAE) FROM NORTHWESTERN PERU
Evan Twomey, Jason L. Brown
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The Santiago poison frog, Adelphobates captivus, a species not seen in life since 1929, was recently rediscovered on an expedition to its type locality in northwestern Peru. The colors of this species, previously unknown, consist of a black dorsum with bright red-orange spots and yellow spots ventrally. We provide amendments to the original description as well as the first accounts of tadpole morphology, vocalization, and natural history. A Bayesian phylogenetic analysis suggests Adelphobates captivus and a species originally described as Dendrobates mysteriosus are sister species that form a monophyletic clade sister to Ranitomeya. We propose to clarify the taxonomic status of D. mysteriosus incertae sedis by erecting a new genus, Excidobates, to include mysteriosus and its sister taxon captivus. Members of this genus are distinguished from Ranitomeya by 11 site substitutions in their rrnS and rrnL sequences, well-developed first fingers, and pale spots on the ventral surfaces of the thighs.

Evan Twomey and Jason L. Brown "SPOTTED POISON FROGS: REDISCOVERY OF A LOST SPECIES AND A NEW GENUS (ANURA: DENDROBATIDAE) FROM NORTHWESTERN PERU," Herpetologica 64(1), 121-137, (1 March 2008). https://doi.org/10.1655/07-009.1
Accepted: 1 January 2008; Published: 1 March 2008
KEYWORDS
Dendrobatidae
Dendrobatoidea
E. mysteriosus comb. nov
Excidobates captivus comb. nov
Excidobates gen. nov
Peru
Poison frogs
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