Lissamphibia ~4,900 species (more than number of extant mammal species) >4,300 species frogs (Anura)...

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Lissamphibia ~4,900 species (more than number of extant mammal species) >4,300 species frogs (Anura) >415 species salamanders (Urodela) >165 species caecilians (Gymnophiona)

Transcript of Lissamphibia ~4,900 species (more than number of extant mammal species) >4,300 species frogs (Anura)...

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Lissamphibia ~4,900 species

(more than number of extant mammal species) >4,300 species frogs (Anura) >415 species salamanders (Urodela) >165 species caecilians (Gymnophiona)

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Lissamphibia Gymnophiona (caecilians)

Typhlonectes

Typhlonectes

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CAECILIANSThe Unknown Amphibian

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Who are they?

• Order: Gymnophiona• Family: 6 families• Genus: 34• Species: 165• Habitat: loose soil,

leaf litter in tropical forests or rivers and streams

• Length: up to 2.4m;

shortest 3.5 in.• Up to 2.2 lbs• Life span: up to 13 yrs • Offspring: 30 – 60

eggs; 2 - 25 young

born

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Range

Central Africa, Southeast Asia, Southern Mexico to Argentina

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Description

• Caecilians are tropical amphibians that look like large worms or slick snakes. They have no arms or legs, and sometimes it’s hard to tell which end is the head and which is the tail! Their shiny skin is ringed with skin folds called annuli, and they usually come in shades of gray, brown, black, orange, or yellow. Some species have tiny, fishlike scales (dermal scales) within the rings.

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) (see Pough CH3)

- elongate, distinctly annulated -primary etc.

- terrestrial, burrowing, or aquatic (derived)

- tails reduced or absent

- eyes reduced (covered by skin or even bone)

- limbs and girdles absent in all extant taxa (still present in fossil ancestor)

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Fig. 3-11 Pough et al. 2001

Fossil Gymnophiona ancestor (Eocaecilia)

evidence of tentacles

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Annuli and Smooth

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Dermal Scale Present in Some Caecilians

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) dermal scales in some spp. - pouches in dermis below annular groove - scales like this not found in other Lissamphibia

Fig. 3-9 Pough et al. 2001

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Caecilian Head

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) - Skulls unique - Well ossified (but openings for eyes, nares, tentacles)

stegokrotaphic = skull completely roofed zygokrotaphic = skull weak in temporal region

vs. gymokrotaphic = temporal region open (anurans + urodelans)

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zygokrotaphic = skull weak in temporal region

Lots of bones fused

stegokrotaphic = skull completely roofed

stegokrotaphic

Fig. 3-10 Pough et al. 2001

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Fig. 13-12 Duellman and Trueb, 1986

Fig. 13-15 Duellman and Trueb, 1986

Caecilian skulls vs. Anuran skullZ

S

G

S S

S S

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) - many bones of skull fused - Why have well ossified skull? - unique dual jaw closing mechanism

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Fossorial

Adult caecilian can bury itself in a matter of minutes. Fossorialanimals spend most of their time underground.

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Aquatic Species

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) - left lung often reduced or absent

- aquatic eggs and larvae, or terrestrial oviposition with female parental care

- some species viviparous- internal fertilization (phallodeum)

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Male Typhlonectes (cloaca)

Typhlonectes (mating)

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Oviparous Species

Some female caecilians lay eggs in damp holes near water. When the larvae hatch they have gills and a short, finned tail to help them swim in the water, feeding on plankton. Through a series of changes the gills are replaced by a single lung, the skin becomes thicker, the annuli develop, and sensory tentacles appear. At this point the newly developed adult returns to the land and goes underground.

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Caecilian EmbryoEmbryo removed fromegg. Yolk is visible aswell as sensory structures along headand side of body. These include mechano- and electrical receptorsof the lateral line.Eggs are laid inburrows near streams.hatch, larval stage livesin streams until metamorphosis a yearlater.

Icthyophis kohtaoensis

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Viviparous Species• Some species give birth to live young that

are fully developed inside the mother before they are born.

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) In viviparous species,

- young nourished by secretions from oviduct

- mother’s skin may produce edible secretions after birth

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Fig. 5-5 Duellman and Trueb, 1986

Fig. 17-13 Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

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Larval Caecilian

Aquatic stage with gills that are transient.

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Senses

• A hard, thick, pointy skull helps these amphibians dig in soft dirt. Because of their underground lifestyle, caecilians have little need to see or hear. Therefore, their eyes are very tiny in some species, or hidden under the skin or skull in other species, making just tiny gray bumps for eyes. Some species in South America spend their lives in water instead of on land. Caecilians don’t have ear openings, so it is doubtful they can hear sounds.

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Tentacles

• Tentacles, located between the nostrils and the eyes, are used to locate prey and detect surroundings.

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) TENTACLE - chemoreception - between eyes and nostrils - protrusible in some taxa - involves structures normally associated with eye and Jacobsen’s organ

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Diet

• Inside a caecilian’s mouth are dozens of needle-sharp teeth. The teeth are used to grab worms, termites, beetle pupae, mollusks, small snakes, frogs, lizards, and even other caecilians. All food is swallowed whole.

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Eating tubifex worms

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Skin Glands

• Caecilians have toxic glands in their skin that sometimes protect them from being eaten by other animals.

Toxic glands

Mucus glands

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Families of Caecilians

• Rhinatrematidae South America

• Ichthyophiidae Southeast Asia

• Uraeotyphlidae Southern India

• Scolecomorphidae Subsahara Africa

• Caeciliaidae South and Central America,

Subsahara Africa, Southern Asia

• Typhlonectidae South America

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Gymnophiona

Pough et al. 2001

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Fig.3-12 Pough et al. 2001

Lissamphibia Gymnophiona (caecilians) 6 families, 34 genera, 165 spp.

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) Rhinatrematidae (2 genera, 9 species; northern South America)

- ancestral (‘primitive’) lineage - true tail - mouth at tip of snout - tentacle next to eye - zygokrotaphic skull (weaker) - many scales - not well-known - likely not fossorial - relatively small - oviparous (egg-laying), with aquatic larvae

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Rhinatrematidae

• Small, terrestrial caecilian with aquatic larvae

@1998 MarvaleeH. Wake

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Gymnophiona (caecilians)

Uraeotyphlidae

1 genus, 5 species; Southern India

Stegokrotaphic skulls

oviparous (with aquatic larvae)

small (300 mm)

true tail

Tentacle underneath the nostril

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Uraeotyphlidae

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Gymnophiona (caecilians)

Ichthyophiidae2 Genera, 38 species+; SE Asia, India, Islands of

the Indo-Pacific, and the PhilippinesTerrestrialOvivparous (up to 100 eggs)True TailTentacle closer to eye than nostril500 mmStegokrotaphic skullDermal Scales

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Ichthyophiidae

• Large terrestrial caecilian with aquatic larvae

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) Scolecomorphidae (2 genera, 5 species; parts of central Africa)

- unusual lineage - vestigial eyes attached to tentacles - orbits absent - zygokrotaphic skull lacking elements - calcified spines on male phallodeum - no scales - oviparous or viviparous

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Scolecomorphidae

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) “Caeciliidae” (21 genera, 90 species; central and S. America, parts of Africa and Asia)

- no tail - mouth recessed under snout - tentacular location varies - scales variable - mostly burrowers - wide range of sizes - some brightly colored - life history variable

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Caeciliaidae

• Very varied with small (10cm) to large (1.5m) organisms.

• Terrestrial, aquatic, oviparous, viviparous.

• Most are gray – black but some are more colorful.

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Gymnophiona (caecilians) Typhlonectidae (5 genera, 13 species; South America)

- often aquatic - tracheal lungs - narial plugs - secondarily zygokrotaphic skulls

- includes largest lungless tetrapod - nocturnal - viviparous with aquatic larvae

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Typhlonectes

Sometimes soldin fish stores.Aquatic.Female withyoung.

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Typhlonectidae

• Aquatic caecilian, viviparous

• Larval gills

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Ambystoma californiense

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Lissamphibia Urodela

(salamanders) 10 families, 61 genera, 415 spp.

Ambystoma californiense

Ambystoma tigrinum

Unken reflexFig. 13.5

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

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Urodela (salamanders) (see Pough CH3) - Urodela (extant) - Caudata (extant plus fossil relatives)

- North America and temperate Eurasia - Plethodontids have radiated in tropics

- extensive salamander fossil record (unlike Gymnophiona)

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Urodela (salamanders) - typically 4-limbed, short bodied, long tail

some with limbs reduced or lost

- costal grooves - most species terrestrial,

but need water for reproduction (some fully aquatic or terrestrial)

- some arboreal

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Urodela (salamanders) - unique jaw musculature

- skulls reduced (bones absent) - skull bone ossification sequence - late appearance of maxillae in skull

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Urodela (salamanders) - lack middle ear cavities and tympana (drum) - various opercular components missing

Pough et al. 2001

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Urodela (salamanders) - mucous and poison glands

(pheromones) - aggregations of mucous glands =

courtship glands (e.g., mental glands)

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mental glands

Fig. 17.3 Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

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Urodela (salamanders) - some external fertilization - mostly internal fertilization

(via spermatophore)

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Duellman and Trueb, 1986

female

male

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Urodela (salamanders) - large genomes (and large cell nuclei)

- usually have larval stage larvae with true teeth, gill slits, external gills

- larvae rather similar to adults (compared to anurans)

palate is remodelled during metamorphosis

- many with direct development

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Sala

man

der

Larv

ae

Pond

Stream

Terrestrial

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

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Urodela (salamanders) - Paedomorphosis common

all adults retain larval characteristics

OR some retain larval characteristics

(facultative) OR

none retain larval characteristics - makes phylogenetic reconstruction difficult

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Urodela (salamanders)

- Unique defensive

adaptations Duellman and Trueb, 1986

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Fig. 10-7 Duellman and Trueb, 1986

Urodela (salamanders) - Unique defensive adaptations

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Fig. 3-1 Pough et al. 2001

Lissamphibia Urodela

(salamanders) 10 families, 61

genera, 415 spp.

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Fig. 10-7 Duellman and Trueb, 1986

Urodela (salamanders) - Unique defensive adaptations

Echinotriton chinhaiensis Chinhai Salamander Salamandridae © Max Sparreboom

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Urodela

Pough et al. 2001

Sirenidae Hynobiidae

Salamandridae

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Pough et al. 2001

Urodela

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Urodela

PlethodontidaeProteidae

Pough et al. 2001

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Urodela (salamanders) Sirenidae

(2 genera, 4 species; SE U.S., NE Mexico)

- ancestral lineage (sister to all other

salamanders) - long, slender, eel like - lack pelvic girdle and hindlimbs - keratinized beak - fully aquatic - prey on invertebrates (insects,

crayfish, worms) - Paedomorphic (no eyelids, external

gills, non-pedicillate teeth, reduction in number of

digits on forelimbs)

- mucous cocoon and aestivation - external fertilization? - oviparous

The dwarf-siren Pseudobranchus striatus (photo J. White)

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Urodela (salamanders) Cryptobranchidae

(2 genera, 3 species; Japan, China, E N. America)

- incomplete metamorphosis adults lack eyelids, retain one pair gill slits - flattened bodies and heads - aquatic - asymmetrical suction

feeding - cutaneous respiration - largest salamanders (up to

1.8 m) - cold mountain streams - external fertilization - males make nests and guard eggs (Den Master)

The Hellbender Cryptobranchus alleganiensis (photo M.A. Donnelly)

© Dr. Eric J. Routman

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Urodela (salamanders) Hynobiidae

(7 genera, 36 species; disjunct Asia)

- complete metamorphosis eyelids, lack gill slits as adults

- lungs may be reduced or absent - some fully aquatic - some with terrestrial adults and migration to breed

- relatively small (100-250 mm) - some breed while wetlands still ice and snow covered - males have territories - males may compete (mating ball) - external fertilization

Batrachuperus mustersi Photo by Max Sparreboom

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Urodela (salamanders) Amphiumidae

(1 genus, 3 species; S, SE U.S.) - elongate, paedomorphic

lack eyelids, lack external gills (but have slits)

- pedicellate teeth - retain both pairs of limbs (and

girdles), but small limbs

- aquatic - eat invertebrates and

vertebrates- ocassionally move overland or

aestivate - up to 1.1 m long - internal fertilization - oviparous on land (alligator nest

mounds?) female parental care

Two-toed amphiuma Amphiuma means © John White

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Urodela (salamanders) Plethodontidae

(28 genera, 266 species; disjunct N, Central, S America, ~ Italy) - diverse and specious

(only group to radiate in tropics) - lungless

(adaptation to mountain streams) - nasolabial groove (chemoreception) - subterranean, aquatic, terrestrial, arboreal - variable body forms

(arboreal often with webbed feet and prehensile tails) - variable life history strategies - include smallest and

~largest terrestrial Urodela

Batrachoseps stebbinsi Tehachapi Slender Salamander © Tim Manolis

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Fig.3-6 Pough et al. 2001

Plethodontidae

Figs 7.2 and 6.1 Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

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Urodela (salamanders) Rhyacotritonidae

(1 genus, 4 species; Pacific Northwest U.S.)

- inhabit old-growth forest (indicator species)

- very old lineage

Rhyacotriton olympicus Olympic Torrent Salamander © William Flaxington

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Urodela (salamanders) Proteidae

(2 genera, 6 species; NE U.S., S Central Europe)

- diploid chromosome count of 38 - paedomorphic

large gills and caudal fins - lack maxillary (~upper jaw) bone - mostly aquatic - Proteus live in caves

(slender; whitish skin; reduced eyes)

Proteus anguinus

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Urodela (salamanders) Salamandridae

(15 genera, 55 species; N America, Europe, Asia, N Africa)

- includes ‘newts’ - may have extremely rugose skin - life history variable - some species with efts (terrestrial immature)

Fig. 13.5 Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

- defensive displays - aposematic coloration

(bright warning) - tetrodotoxins (neuro)

Unken reflex

Newts Taricha spp.

Salamandra salamandra Fire Salamander © Arie van der Meijden

Taricha granulosa Rough-skinned Newt © Harry Greene

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Urodela (salamanders) Ambystomatidae

(1 genus, 32 species; N America)

- several hybrids and unisexual forms variable ploidy and number of parental species

- hybrids generally of ancient origin - Ambystoma mexicanum often used in research - variable metamorphosis (none, some, all)- robust and ‘medium sized’

Ambystoma californiense

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Urodela (salamanders) Dicamptodontidae

(1 genus, 4 species; ~NW U.S.) - similar to Ambystomatidae - relatively large - inhabit coniferous forest habitats

cold streams and cold mountain lakes

- species very difficult to differentiate morphologically

Dicamptodon tenebrosus Pacific Giant Salamander © Henk Wallays

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Rana pipiens

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Lissamphibia

Anura (frogs)

~28 families, 310 genera, 4,300 spp.

Fig. 3-20 Pough et al. 2001

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Zug et al. 2001

caecilian

salamander

frog

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Anura (frogs) (see Pough CH3) - Salientia (clade that includes extinct

Triadobatrachus)

Pough et al. 2001

tail

extra vertebrae

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Anura (frogs) - most extant families first appear in the Cretaceous - radiation in the early Cenozoic

Ascaphus truei

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Anura (frogs) (see Pough CH3)

GENERAL- tail absent

- metamorphosis larvae and adults very different

- specialized skin...

- jumpers (saltation)

- 88% of Lissamphibia are Anura

- found ~worldwide except Antarctica, poles, and very dry deserts

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Anura (frogs)

Jumping

Most anurans jump

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Derived jumper

Likely ancestral state was terrestrial protofrog that moved into water in riparian system to avoid danger.

‘Jumping’ is fast way to get to safety.

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Anura (frogs)

Jumping(lose mass, add rigidity)

- inflexible vertebral column - caudal vertebrae fused to form urostyle - loss and reduction of skull bones

- loss of teeth in lower jaw (except one species) - anterior ribs reduced or lost

- radius-ulna and tibia-fibula fused - elongate ankle bones (astragulus-calcaneum)

transfers energy to trunk during push-off - limbs folded under body (greater propulsion)

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Anura (frogs) Jumping etc. - skull reduced

Fig. 3-16 Pough et al. 2001

- 9 or fewer vertebrae

- fused bones limbs, urostyle

- no tail

- elongate hindlimbs ankles, feet

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Anura (frogs)

Pectoral Girdles

1. arciferal - widespread - ancestral

2. firmisternal - derived

- systematics- intermediate conditions - reversals

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Anura (frogs)

Reproduction (typically external) Amplexus:

1. inguinal 2. axillary ------> 3. cephalic

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Eggs deposited: - in water - on land - suspended in air

Development: - complete metamorphosis - direct development - viviparity

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Anura (frogs)

Reproduction Parental Care:

not typical, but...

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Darwin frog, vocal sac

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Anura (frogs) Reproduction Metamorphosis:

Tadpole (Larvae) - herbivorous filter feeders - some carnivorous - or cannibalistic - some don’t feed at all

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Modify gut, body plan, mouth, jaws, limbs etc.

Adult - mostly carnivorous - two frugivorous species - tongue attachment

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Lissamphibia

Anura (frogs)

~28 families, 310 genera, > 4,300 spp.

Fig. 3-20 Pough et al. 2001

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Anura (frogs)

Larvae

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Surface film

Suctorial scraper

Carnivore

Use to ID

Internal Gills

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Anura (frogs)

Larvae General types based on morphology and diet

1 2 3 4

Pough et al., 2001

spiraclespiracles

Keratinous mouth parts

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Anura (frogs)

SoundMost important anuran communication tool

- Most anurans vocalize - Usually male - Inflate throat sacs

- species specific calls - mate attraction - territoriality - alarm calls

- more later...

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Anura (frogs)

Skin Specialized for multiple functions

- hydration, defense, locomotion, thermoregulation, reproduction, respiration etc.

glands - mucus (2 types) - poison = granular pigmentation

Fig 2.1 Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

12

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Anura (frogs)

Skin Specialized glands A. mucus

-1 moist coating prevent dehydration

-2 sexual dimorphism nuptial pads

Nuptial pads

Pough et al., 2001

B. poison = granular -defensive secretions (sticky, antibiotics, toxic, etc.)

Dendrobates tinctorious

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Anura (frogs)

Skin Pigmentation (Chromatophores)

Xanthophores Iridophores Melanophores

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

Pigmentation under hormonal control

-reflectance -infrared -aposematic

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Anura (frogs) Skin

Respiration - blood vessels

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

- epidermal thickness

- versus hydration gas transfer requires ‘solution’

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Lissamphibia

Anura (frogs)

~28 families, 310 genera, 4,300 spp.

Fig. 3-20 Pough et al. 2001

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Anura (frogs) Ascaphidae

(1 species; ~NW U.S., into Canada)

- monotypic Family and Genus

- ‘tailed frog’ - tail is extension of cloaca - internal fertilization (1 of ~3 spp.) - do not call - no tympana - highly turbulent aquatic habitat Ascaphus truei

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Anura (frogs) Leiopelmatidae

(1 genus, 3 species; New Zealand)

- only amphibians native to NZ - ribs embedded in ventral musculature - lack ear components and vocal sac - direct development - male parental care in 2/3 species

Leiopelma hochstetteri

Leiopelma hamiltoni

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Anura (frogs) Bombinatoridae

(2 genera, 8 species; Europe, E Asia)

- Bombina toxic skin secretions aposematic coloration (~orange + yellow) unken reflex

Bombina orientalis

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Lissamphibia

Anura (frogs)

~28 families, 310 genera, 4,300 spp.

Fig. 3-20 Pough et al. 2001

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Anura (frogs) Pelobatidae (3 genera, 11 species; N America, Eurasia)

- include ‘spade foots’ - well-developed keratinous, spade-like

metatarsal tubercle on hind feet

- fossorial - often with enlarged parotoid glands on dorsum - desert adapted

aestivate explosive breeders egg to metamorph in ~8 days

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Anura (frogs) Pelobatidae (con’t)

Scaphiopus couchii

spade

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Anura (frogs) Rhinophrynidae

(1 species; Texas to Costa Rica)

- monotypic family and genus - ultra fossorial

spade tubercles pointed head with cornified skin small eyes no tympanum reinforced skull

- feed on ants and termites underground

- unique tongue

Rhinophrynus dorsalis

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Anura (frogs) Pipidae

(5 genera, ~30 species; Panama, S America, sub-Saharan Africa)

- no tongue - keratinous ‘claws’ - aquatic - modified ears and calling - Xenopus laevis

research polyploids

- Pipa spp. eggs in dorsal skin of female

X. tropicalis

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Lissamphibia

Anura (frogs)

~28 families, 310 genera, 4,300 spp.

Fig. 3-20 Pough et al. 2001

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Anura (frogs) Bufonidae

(33 genera, ~400 species; widespread, not in Australopapuan region)

- Bidder’s organ rudimentary ovary on male testes (paedomorphic)

- no teeth - parotoid glands

toxins - Bufo marinus

pest

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Anura (frogs) “Leptodactylidae“

(49 genera, > 900 species; Americas, West Indies)

- not monophyletic - variable - Eleutherodactylus

> 500 species!! most species rich genus of vertebrates some with direct dvpt. 2 spp. with internal fert.

Eleutherodactylus auriculatus

Ceratophrys cornuta

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Anura (frogs) Myobatrachidae

(21 genera, 120 species; Australia, New Guinea, Tasmania)

- variable

- one species with male inguinal pouches for brood rearing - two species with gastric brooding in female Rheobatrachus (extinct?) Rheobatrachus vitellinus

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Anura (frogs) Rhinodermatidae

(2 species; Argentina and Chile)

- fleshy proboscis at tip of snout

- males carry larvae to water, or brood in vocal pouch

Rhinoderma darwinii

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Anura (frogs) Hylidae

(38 genera, 760 species; Americas, W indies, Australopapuan region) (Hyla in Americas, Eurasia, Japan, N Africa)

- arboreal generally - well-developed toe discs - claw-shaped terminal phalanges - many spp. with females that

transport young dorsally - Phyllomedusa

toxin for native rituals lipid glands in skin wiping behavior

Phyllomedusa sauvagi

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Anura (frogs) Centrolenidae

(3 genera, > 130 species; Mexico to S America)

- medial process on 3rd metacarpal - toe discs - terminal phalanges T-shaped - eggs attended by males - transparent venter =

‘glass frogs’

Centrolenella oyampiensis

Centrolenella fleischmanni

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Lissamphibia

Anura (frogs)

~28 families, 310 genera, 4,300 spp.

Fig. 3-20 Pough et al. 2001

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Anura (frogs) Dendrobatidae

(6 genera, 185 species; Cent. America, N South America)

- pair of dermal scutes on dorsal surface of fingers - generally diurnal and terrestrial - cephalic amplexus (if amplex) - parental care

move larvae around

- Dendrobates may feed tadpoles eggs

- Phyllobates terribilis lipophilic alkaloids dietary origin

Dendrobates tinctorious

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Anura (frogs) Arthroleptidae

(7 genera, 75 species; sub-Saharan Africa)

- includes Trichobatrachus robustus (hairy frog) male sits on clutch and aids aeration?

Stebbins and Cohen, 1995

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Anura (frogs) “Ranidae”

(46 genera, > 700 species; most everywhere, except many islands)

- likely not monophyletic - variable - some unique Rana esculenta hybrids both sexes represented alternate generations sexual <---> asexual

Rana pipiens

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Anura (frogs) Hyperoliidae

(19 genera, 230 species; sub-Saharan Africa, Seychelles, Madagascar)

- many arboreal - toe discs - ~ brightly colored - Afrixalus eggs on leaf then ‘taco’

Afrixalus osorioi congicus

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Anura (frogs) Rhacophoridae

(15 genera, 315 species; Africa, Madagascar, Asia)

- mostly arboreal - enlarged toe discs - some with foam nests - some communal nests

- Mantella with skin alkaloids and aposematic coloration

Buergeria japanicus