identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
DF65A94B0B2ED65DFF2175D1F7F0FE23.text	DF65A94B0B2ED65DFF2175D1F7F0FE23.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca cuencana Carvajal-Endara & Coloma & Morales-Mite & Guayasamin & Székely & Duellman 2019	<div><p>Gastrotheca cuencana sp. nov.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 82F87E67-2940-424C-AC03-BC751224D5E4</p><p>Holotype. CJ 1391 (Fig. 2), an adult male, from the city of <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.031334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8994193" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.031334/lat -2.8994193)">Cuenca</a>, 2579 m (02° 53' 57.91" S, 79° 01' 52.79" W), Azuay Province, Ecuador, one of a series obtained on 8 June 2011 by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara and Henry Grefa.</p><p>Paratypes. ( Total 48: 10 adult males, 21 adult females, 17 juveniles). Ecuador: Azuay : CJ 1392–7, collected with the holotype; KU 120676 (female), 120683 –4, 120690, 120695 (4 juveniles), 120699 (male), 120705 (male), 120709 –10 (males), 120713 (female), 120718 –9 (female, male), 120721 (female), 120722 (male) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.031334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8994193" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.031334/lat -2.8994193)">Cuenca</a>, 2600 m, (02° 53' 57.91" S, 79° 01' 52.79" W), on 19 June 1968 by John D. Lynch ; KU 138616 (female), 138619– 21 (male, females) from 4 km E: <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.3667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8833" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.3667/lat -2.8833)">Cuenca</a> 2540 m (02° 52' 59.88" S, 78° 22' 0.11" W), on 10 June 1970 by Thomas H. Fritts ; KU 141572 (female) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.799995&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.1" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.799995/lat -3.1)">2.1 km S Cutchil</a>, 2720 m (03° 06' 00"S, 78° 47' 59.99"W), on 16 May 1971 by Richard R. Montanucci ; KU 141579 (female) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.799995&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0832973" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.799995/lat -3.0832973)">3.5 km S Cutchil</a>, 2785 m (03° 04' 59.87" S, 78° 47' 59.99" W), on 14 May 1971 by Richard R. Montanucci ; KU 141582 (juvenile) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.9833&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8632998" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.9833/lat -2.8632998)">8 km NW Cuenca</a>, 2803 m (02° 51' 47.88" S, 78° 58' 59.88" W), on 16 May 1971 by Richard R. Montanucci ; KU 141583 (female) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.066696&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8667002" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.066696/lat -2.8667002)">8.8 km NW Cuenca</a>, 3820 m (02° 52' 00.12" S, 79° 04' 00.12" W), on 15 May 1971 by Richard R. Montanucci ; KU 203441 (male) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.13&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.839997" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.13/lat -2.839997)">Laguna de Zurucuchu</a>, 16 km NW Cuenca, 3200 m (02° 50' 23.99" S, 79° 07' 47.99" W), on 5 March 1984 by William E. Duellman ; KU 129779–82 (4 females), 129783–91 (9 juveniles), 129793–94 (juveniles), 129795 (female), 129796 (juvenile) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.9667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8833" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.9667/lat -2.8833)">Río Matadero</a>, 12 km E Cuenca (02° 52' 59.88"S, 78° 58' 00.12" W), on 17 November 1968 by Craig E. Nelson. Cañar : KU 141571 (male) and KU 141573 (female) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.8667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.7" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.8667/lat -2.7)">Biblián</a>, 2620 (02° 42' 00" S, 78° 52' 00.12" W), on 17 and 23 May 1971, respectively, by Richard R. Montanucci ; KU 142620–24 (4 females, male), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.8667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.7" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.8667/lat -2.7)">Biblián</a>, 2620 m (02° 42' 00" S, 78° 52' 00.12" W), on 25 July 1971 by William E. Duellman ; KU 147113 (female) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.8667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.7" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.8667/lat -2.7)">Biblián</a>, 2620 m (02° 42' 00" S, 78° 52' 00.12" W), on 15 January 1972 by John E. Simmons .</p><p>Referred specimens. (Total 36, 28 adult males, 8 adult females). Ecuador: Azuay: QCAZ 1239 (male), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.80293&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0523334" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.80293/lat -3.0523334)">Sigsig</a>, 2480 m (03° 03' 08.4" S, 78° 48' 10.56" W), on 24 July 1989 by Luis A. Coloma and Luis E. López ; QCAZ 26309 (female), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.00798&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0987887" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.00798/lat -3.0987887)">Cumbe</a>, 2740 m (03° 05' 55.64" S, 79° 00' 28.73" W), on 8 August 2003 by Patricio Vargas ; QCAZ 26348–50 (males), 26353 (female), 26357–64 (8 males), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.00798&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0987887" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.00798/lat -3.0987887)">Cumbe</a>, 2740 m (03° 05' 55.64" S, 79° 00' 28.73" W), on 9 August 2003 by Luis A. Coloma, Ítalo G. Tapia, Andrés Merino Viteri, Erik Wild and Patricio Vargas Mena ; QCAZ 26354 (female), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.00798&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0987887" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.00798/lat -3.0987887)">Cumbe</a>, 2740 m (03° 05' 55.64" S, 79° 00' 28.73" W), on 9 August 2003 by Ítalo G. Tapia ; QCAZ 26357–8 (males), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.00798&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0987887" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.00798/lat -3.0987887)">Cumbe</a>, 2740 m (03° 05' 55.64" S, 79° 00' 28.73" W), on 9 August 2003 by Andrés Merino Viteri ; QCAZ 31477 (male), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.80293&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0523334" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.80293/lat -3.0523334)">Sigsig</a>, 2424 m (03° 03' 08.4" S, 78° 48' 10.56" W), on 8 March 2006 by Ítalo G. Tapia ; QCAZ 31509, 31511 (males), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-78.80293&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0523334" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -78.80293/lat -3.0523334)">Sigsig</a>, 2424 m (03° 03' 8.4" S, 78° 48' 10.56" W), on 9 March 2006 by Ítalo G. Tapia and Giovanni Onore ; QCAZ 34131 (female), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.031334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8994193" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.031334/lat -2.8994193)">Cuenca</a>, 2579 m (02° 53' 57.91" S, 79° 01' 52.79" W), on 27 February 1979 by Fernando I. Ortiz ; QCAZ 37375–6, 37379–81, QCAZ 37386 (6 males), from unknown locality, on 31 May 2007 by Zoológico Amaru; QCAZ 38232 (male), from Carmen del <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.05&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.9333334" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.05/lat -2.9333334)">Guzho</a>, 2666 m (02° 56' 00" S, 79° 03' 00" W), on 16 June 2007 by Hari González Maldonado ; QCAZ 39384–5 (female, male), from Tarqui, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.03151&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0106" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.03151/lat -3.0106)">Patapamba</a>, 2600 m (03° 00' 38.16" S, 79° 01' 53.43" W), on 21 June 2007 by Ernesto Arbeláez Ortiz ; QCAZ 42720–1 (males) from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.031334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-2.8994193" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.031334/lat -2.8994193)">Cuenca</a>, 2579 m (02° 53' 57.91" S, 79° 01' 52.79" W), on 3 October 2007 by Sofía Carvajal-Endara and Flavio Jaramillo ; QCAZ 47106 (male), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.04448&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.0158806" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.04448/lat -3.0158806)">Tarqui</a>, 2741 m (03° 00' 57.17" S, 79° 02' 40.13" W), on 21 June 2007 by Ernesto Arbeláez Ortiz. Cañar : QCAZ 42826, 42835, 42841 (females), from Papaloma de la Nube, 3011 m (02° 40' 21.54" S, 78° 54' 21.28" W), on 12–14 August 2008 by Sofía Carvajal-Endara .</p><p>Diagnosis. Included in the genus Gastrotheca by having a closed brood pouch on dorsum of female. A moderately large species (49.0– 61.6 mm SVL in females, n = 28; 45.2–53.7 mm SVL in males, n = 38), with tibia length 39¯50% SVL, slightly shorter than length of foot; (2) interorbital distance slightly larger than width of upper eyelid; (3) skin on dorsum finely granular, not co-ossified with skull, lacking transverse ridges; (4) supraciliary processes absent; (5) heel lacking calcar or tubercle; (6) tympanic annulus weakly granular to smooth; (7) Fingers I and II about equal in length, width of discs greater than digits; (8) fingers unwebbed; (9) webbing between external toes extending to antepenultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe IV, to penultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe V; (10) in life, dorsum green, tan, brown, or reddish-brown with or without dark paravertebral marks; (11) head markings consisting of pale labial stripe and, in some individuals, an inconspicuous canthal stripe; (12) pale white or cream dorsolateral stripe present; (13) flanks tan, brown, or green with cream flecks or spots; groin and anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs translucent cream without marks and with a faint pale blue tinge in some; (14) venter uniform creamy white; (15) in females, brood pouch single, dorsal.</p><p>In comparison with similar species in Ecuador, G. cuencana is most like G. litonedis, G. lojana, G. elicioi, and G. riobambae . It differs from these species by having a uniform creamy white venter; whereas the venter is pale gray in G. litonedis, and cream with dark flecks, spots or mottling in G. lojana, G. elicioi, and G. riobambae . In G. cuencana the dorsal surfaces of fingers are cream, whereas in the other species dorsal surfaces of fingers are of the same color as the rest of the body (tan, brown, or green). Gastrotheca cuencana also differs from G. litonedis, G. elicioi, and G. riobambae by lacking a dark canthal stripe. Moreover, in G. cuencana the groin and anterior surfaces of thighs are mostly translucent cream without marks; whereas, in G. litonedis the groin and anterior surface of thighs are usually bronze-brown or tan with cream or darks flecks and spots. In G. lojana and G. riobambae the groin and anterior surfaces of the thighs are usually cream with black mottling; in G. elicioi the groin and anterior surfaces of thighs usually have dark and cream flecks and spots. In profile, the snout in G. cuencana is rounded above and inclined anteroventrally, whereas the snout in G. elicioi, G. lojana, and G. litonedis is bluntly rounded. Furthermore, G. cuencana has a conspicuous, elevated row of dorsolateral warts whereas these are barely raised in G. litonedi s; a narrow, cream supracloacal stripe is present in G. litonedis, G. lojana, and G. riobambae; whereas the stripe is fragmented in G. elicioi and absent in most G. cuencana . Gastrotheca lojana and G. riobambae also differ from G. cuencana and G. litonedis by having a complex call, whereas the call in the latter two species is a simple call. Additionally, the call of G. cuencana has a lower note rate, shorter note duration, longer inter-note interval and a lower dominant and 90% bandwidth frequency compared with G. litonedis . Finally, G. cuencana differs from its sister species ( G. litonedis) by having a genetic distance of 1.2% (in a DNA dataset of 438 bp, 16S gene).</p><p>Gastrotheca cuencana occurs in syntopy with G. pseustes (sensu lato) throughout most of its range. Gastrotheca pseustes differs from G. cuencana by having coarsely granular skin on the dorsum, in contrast to the usually finely granular dorsum in G. cuencana . In G. cuencana the venter is uniform creamy white, whereas it is cream or white with dark flecks or spots in G. pseustes; also the call of G. cuencana is simple, whereas in G. pseustes the call is complex.</p><p>Description of holotype. An adult male (Fig. 2); body moderately robust; SVL 50.6 mm; head wider that long; snout rounded in dorsal view, rounded and inclined anteroventrally in profile; canthus rostralis round in section; loreal region concave, lips rounded; top of head flat; interorbital distance 104% of width of upper eyelid; internarial area slightly elevated; nostrils not protuberant, directed anterolaterally, posterior to level of anterior margin of lower jaw; diameter of eye greater than its distance from nostril; tympanum round, separated from eye by distance about equal to diameter of tympanum; tympanic annulus and membrane weakly granular; supratympanic fold moderately weak, extending from behind the tympanum to the insertion of the forelimb. Dentigerous vomerine processes narrowly separated medially, each bearing four teeth.</p><p>Arm robust; ulnar tubercles absent; hand and fingers moderately large (TFL 35% of SVL), unwebbed, with distinct narrow lateral fringes; discs moderately large and rounded, width of disc of Finger III greater that diameter of tympanum; relative lengths of fingers I=II&lt;IV&lt;III; subarticular tubercles prominent, round, conical in lateral profile, non bifid; supernumerary tubercles, small, numerous, conical; palmar tubercle absent, prepollical tubercle elliptical. Hind limb robust; tibia length 46% SVL; foot length 49% SVL; calcar, tarsal tubercles, and inner tarsal fold absent; outer metatarsal tubercle absent; inner metatarsal tubercle large, elliptical; toes moderately long; relative length of toes I&lt;II&lt;III=V&lt;IV; basal webbing between Toes I and II; webbing formula for other toes II1— 2III 1— 2IV 2— 1V; subarticular tubercles moderately large, rounded; supernumerary tubercles, numerous, minute and rounded. Nuptial pad absent.</p><p>Skin on dorsum finely granular; skin on flanks coarsely granular; skin on throat, venter surfaces of thighs, and arms granular; skin on belly areolate; skin on venter surface of shanks smooth; numerous small tubercles lateral to cloacal opening. Vocal sac single, median, subgular. Vocal slits present at posterior lingual margins of mandibles. Tongue broad, suboval, not notched posteriorly, fully attached to mouth floor.</p><p>Coloration in life (Fig. 2). The dorsum is yellowish brown with two darker, black delineated, continuous, paravertebral markings. These markings extend to the sacrum where they bifurcate and become two rows of irregular blotches at each side of the vertebral axis. The dorsal surfaces of the limbs are yellowish brown with irregular gray blotches. Cream dorsolateral and labial stripes are present; the latter continues to the insertion of forelimb; a faint brown canthal stripe is present. The flanks are bronze-brown with small black spots. The venter, groin, and anterior surfaces of the thighs are uniform creamy white; the posterior surfaces of the thighs have a faint bluish coloration. The dorsal surfaces of the fingers are cream. The gular region is creamy gray laterally. The iris is reddish bronze with black reticulations.</p><p>Coloration in preservative. The dorsum is tan with two well-defined, gray paravertebral markings, which bifurcate at the level of sacrum to become two rows of irregular blotches on each side of the vertebral axis. A white dorsolateral stripe is present. The dorsal surfaces of limbs are tan with irregular gray blotches. A cream labial stripe continues to the insertion of the forelimb; a faint canthal is present. The flanks are gray; the venter, groin, and anterior surfaces of thighs are uniform creamy white; the posterior surfaces of thighs have a faint bluish coloration. The gular region is creamy gray.</p><p>Measurements (in mm). SVL: 50.4, TIBL: 21.9, FL: 24.9, HL: 16.9, HW: 19.1, IOD: 5.2, EW: 5.0 IND: 3.3, ED: 5.6, EN: 4.1, TD: 2.8, FFL: 10.0, TFL: 17.5, TFD: 3.4.</p><p>Variation. Morphometric variation of 28 females and 38 males is summarized in Table 3. Females are larger than males (54.2± 2.9 mm; 49.6± 2.4 mm). The skin on the dorsum is finely granular in most, but it varies in some specimens from weakly areolate to coarsely granular. All adults have a supratympanic fold that usually extends from the posterior part of the tympanum to point above the insertion of forelimb. The tympanic annulus is usually smooth, but some individuals (e.g., CJ 1395, 1940) have a slightly granular annulus (Fig. 3A, C). Each dentigerous vomerine process has 2–7 teeth (4.4±1.1, n = 39).</p><p>Color variation in preservative. Preserved specimens have bluish gray dorsum (tan and reddish-brown in CJ 1397). Faint paravertebral marks are present. A canthal stripe is absent in most specimens; the flanks and posterior surfaces of the thighs are dark gray with white spots evenly distributed in some specimens. In all specimens, a prominent white labial stripe extends from the posterior margin of the lip to the insertion of the forelimb. A narrow white dorsolateral stripe is evident in most specimens. The groin and the anterior surfaces of the thighs are uniform creamy gray. The ventral surfaces are uniform creamy white. The posterior surfaces of thighs usually are creamy gray, but they are pale blue in some specimens. Some males have yellowish brown nuptial pads on the medial surface of the thumb.</p><p>Color variation in life. (Figs. 3–4). The dorsum is uniform green (CJ 1393), reddish brown (CJ 1397), or tan (CJ 1392) with (CJ 1391) or without (CJ 1392) darker paravertebral marks. When present, the paravertebral markings usually are well defined; at the level of the sacrum they become two rows of irregular blotches at each side of the vertebral axis. The ventral surfaces are uniform creamy white. A cream labial stripe is extends from the posterior margin of the lip to the insertion of the forelimb; a dark brown canthal stripe is absent in most individuals. The tympanum is brown, tan, or olive green. The iris is reddish bronze with black reticulations. A creamy white dorsolateral stripe is evident in most individuals. The flanks are cream, bronze brown, or green. The groin and anterior surfaces of the thighs are translucent cream without dark markings (Fig. 3). The posterior surfaces of the thighs are translucent, cream, or pale blue or green. When present, supracloacal and heel stripes are cream or tan. The ventral surfaces of the shanks have a faint tinge of pale blue. The gular surface varies from white to creamy gray.</p><p>……continued on the next page</p><p>……continued on the next page</p><p>Tadpoles. Tadpoles belong to Type IV tadpole of Orton (1953), and the exotroph, benthic ecomorphological guild. All measurements are expressed in millimeters. The following description is based on a specimen in Stage 38 (CJ 1945a), from a series of eight tadpoles (CJ 1945) obtained from a pond at south Cuenca, 2579 m, Azuay Province, Ecuador, by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara, and Henry Grefa on 8 June 2011 (Fig. 5A). Total length 44.6; body length 17.3 (39% of total length). Body ovoid in dorsal and lateral views, slightly depressed; throat slightly concave in lateral profile, sloping from tip of snout to belly; body width at the level of spiracle 11.5, and height at same position 9.3, head width at level of eyes 8.5. Lateral line system present but barely visible, supraorbital and infraorbital lines both rising at level of tip of snout, extending parallel to the eye and making contact immediately behind eye; angular line descending vertically just porterior of eye to throat, it dorsally contacts with post infraorbital line; anterior oral line descending vertically from oral disc level and behind nares level to throat; it makes a curve that parallels infraorbital line, forming a circuit continuous with angular and loreal lines; dorsal body and middle body lines not visible. Nostril medium sized (in proportion to body length), ovoid, protruding, having a fleshy annulus, its opening directed anterolaterally. Snout–nostril distance 2.3; internarial distance 2.4. Eye directed dorsally; eye length 1.8, eye width 1.8; interorbital distance 4.3. Spiracle sinistral, located at midbody level, spiracular opening oriented posteriorly; distance from tip of snout to spiracular opening 11.0; end of spiracular tube rounded, attached to body wall, inner wall of spiracular tube not evident; tube length 3.1, tube transverse width 2.0. Vent tube dextral, opening oriented posteriorly, tube length 1.7, tube transverse width 1.8. Tail length 27.2; caudal musculature slender, narrowing gradually until tail terminus; caudal muscle height 3.7, width 3,2; caudal fins well developed and proportional, arising near tail-body junction, forming a low hump; dorsal fin height 3.0, ventral fin height 2.8; maximum height of tail 9.3; tail terminus rounded, caudal musculature not reaching fin terminus.</p><p>Oral disc small, ventral, located near tip of snout, not protruding laterally beyond body; transverse width 4.7. It is surrounded by a uniserial row of marginal papillae, interrupted medially on upper lip; lower lip papillae alternate in orientation, giving appearance of two rows; upper lip with 29 papillae on right side and 27 papillae on left side; lower lip bearing 62 marginal papillae; upper jaw sheath medium-sized, forming a smooth arch and finely serrated, height 0.36, transverse width 2.8 (60% of width of oral width); lower jaw sheath V- shaped, open and finely serrated, width 1.92, height 0.7. Labial tooth row formula 2/3(1); tooth rows lengths: A1: 3.6, A2: 3.5, P1 right row 1.5, P1 left row 1.6, P1 gap 0.2, P2: 3.4, P3: 3.0. (Fig. 6B).</p><p>Color in preservative. Dorsum dull gray with darker areas on flanks, above eye, and on throat; body contour and snout translucent. Caudal musculature and fins with scattered cream dots, with higher suffusion near tail base, otherwise translucent. Venter pale, translucent in belly region, guts exposed; eyes lavender gray; oral apparatus translucent.</p><p>Color in life. In dorsal view, body olive-cream; snout and flanks paler olive-cream. In ventral view, guts dark gray in belly area; reddish gills visible throughout throat. Caudal musculature covered by a nearly continuous line of cream marks, proximal half of musculature reddish cream with myomeres and medial line well defined, distal half translucent; dorsal and ventral fins translucent, with scattered cream dots, heavily suffused near tail-body junction. Spiracle, oral apparatus, and legs olive-cream. Iris gold.</p><p>Variation. Variation of 28 meristic characters of tadpoles in Stages 37–39 (CJ 1945) are shown in Table 4. Total length varies between 42.3 (Stage 37) and 48.7 (Stage 39) and tail length proportion remains about 61%; labial tooth row formula is 2/3(1). The number of marginal papillae varies among specimens and Gosner stages, variation in number of ventral papillae at lower lip is high (39–64).</p><p>......continued on the next page</p><p>We documented changes in coloration during ontogenetic development of one, mostly brown individual (CJ 1945) (Fig. 7). At Stage 41, the dorsum and flanks are diffuse brown with a well-defined pattern of brown-gray paravertebral stripes and a couple of blotches at posterior dorsolateral body. A dark, gray-black stripe borders the canthal and dorsolateral body extending to level of midbody, bordered dorsally by a creamy-white stripe that becomes wider at the distal end. The iris has a red suffusion. By Stage 46, markings on the dorsum and flanks are better defined and the black-gray stripe of flanks becomes a nearly black stripe; fingers are yellowish cream. Scattered green pigments are present in the anterior portion of the paravertebral stripes.</p><p>Comparisons. Tadpoles of Gastrotheca cuencana may occur in sympatry with the ones of G. pseustes 2. Gastrotheca cuencana differs from it by having less pigmentation on dorsum and venter, by lacking a reticulated pattern on flanks and by having a flesh colored tail musculature.</p><p>Vocalization. Eight individuals of Gastrotheca cuencana were recorded from two locations in Azuay Province (3 individuals from Cuenca and 3 from Río Mazán) and from one location in Cañar Province (2 individuals from Papaloma de la Nube) (Appendix III). Descriptive statistics of the acoustic variables are provided in Table 5. The advertisement call of G. cuencana is a simple call, composed of a series of short, single-pulsed notes, emitted at regular intervals (Fig. 8 A–D). In our recordings the calls have between 3 and 19 notes per call. The notes had a mean duration of 0.016 s (SD = 0.007) and a mean inter-note interval of 2.783 s (SD = 1.004). The mean dominant frequency of the call was 1147.9 Hz (SD = 99.536), with a mean 90% bandwidth of 1018.6–1269.4 Hz. The fundamental frequency and harmonics are not clearly recognizable.</p><p>……continued on the next page</p><p>Comparisons. The advertisement call of Gastrotheca cuencana is similar to that of G. litonedis, all the other species of Gastrotheca in the southern Ecuadorian Andes have complex calls. However, the call of G. cuencana has a lower note rate, shorter note duration, longer inter-note interval and a lower dominant and 90% bandwidth frequency compared with G. litonedis (Table 5).</p><p>Distribution and ecology. Gastrotheca cuencana is known from the Paute Basin, which includes the eastern and western Cordilleras (Fig. 9). Its elevational range is 2407–3172 m in an area of extent of occurrence of about 1168 km 2.</p><p>This nocturnal, semiarboreal species inhabits mostly disturbed areas and a few forests in the Evergreen High Montane Forest of the Cordillera Occidental of the Andes (Ministerio de Ambiente del Ecuador 2012), where the average annual rainfall is 660–1122 mm and the average annual temperature is 9.6–15.2 °C (Fick &amp; Hijmans 2017). This species is found in pasture lands and urban grasslands where lentic water is available for tadpoles; thus, the frogs occur close to irrigation ditches, water reservoirs, temporary ponds or wetlands. The holotype and eight other individuals were collected in grassland in an urban area (Cuenca). Males were calling from small shrubs at approximately 80–100 cm above the ground. Females were perched on branches of shrubs at approximately 40 cm above the ground and also among the grass. A brooding female is depicted in Figure 10K. Eight tadpoles were found in a small temporary pond. Gastrotheca cuencana is syntopic with G. pseustes (sensu lato) throughout most of its range.</p><p>Conservation status. We suggest that Gastrotheca cuencana should be considered as Endangered according to criteria B1ab(i,ii,iii,iv) of the IUCN Red List. Its small area of known occurrence (1168 km 2) is fragmented, and its habitats are in heavily human populated areas. For example, the city of Cuenca is rapidly growing and occupying previous rural areas (Fig. 11B) where swampy areas are being drained. One population inhabits Cajas National Park, which affords protection from habitat destruction. Some efforts (in situ and ex situ) to protect this species are underway by parties of the Cajas National Park, by Amaru Zoo (Amphibian Ark 2013), and the city council of Cuenca (Siavichay-Pesántez et al. 2016). However, these efforts urgently need to be reinforced.</p><p>Etymology. The specific name cuencana is an adjective referring to people born in Cuenca, the capital city of the province of Azuay, where this species occurs. We also use this name to highlight the pioneer efforts taking place in Cuenca, throughout the project Conservation of the Urban Biodiversity of the Municipality. The project is directed to protect the urban and suburban species of frogs through biorestauration and protection of watersheds, river banks, wetlands, and frog ponds (Arbeláez Ortiz &amp; Vega Toral 2008, Siavichay-Pesántez et al. 2016).</p><p>Comments. Gastrotheca cuencana was confused with G. litonedis in the past. Our recognition of both species emphasizes the discrete morphological and acoustic differences between them. Gastrotheca cuencana belongs to the subgenus Duellmania (sensu Duellman 2015) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B2ED65DFF2175D1F7F0FE23	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
DF65A94B0B1FD653FF21769BF74CF914.text	DF65A94B0B1FD653FF21769BF74CF914.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca elicioi Carvajal-Endara & Coloma & Morales-Mite & Guayasamin & Székely & Duellman 2019	<div><p>Gastrotheca elicioi sp. nov.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 3D26B088-B527-4362-94E8-647FF26C8419</p><p>Holotype. CJ 1402 (Fig. 12), an adult male (collected as tadpole in the field and captive raised), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.20277&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-4.09042" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.20277/lat -4.09042)">Cajanuma</a>, entrance to Parque Nacional Podocarpus in the Loja-Vilcabamba road, 2456 m (04° 05' 25.51" S, 79° 12' 09.97" W), Loja Province, Ecuador, one of a series obtained on 14 June 2011 by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara, and Henry Grefa.</p><p>Paratypes. ( Total 18: 11 males, 3 females, 4 juveniles). Ecuador: Loja : CJ 413–4 (juvenile, male), 1398–401 (four males), 1941 (male) collected with the holotype; KU 142603–5 (female, subadults), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.23083&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-4.0136085" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.23083/lat -4.0136085)">5.5 km W Loja</a>, 2330 m (04° 00' 48.99" S, 79° 13' 50.99" W), on 17 July 1971 by William E. Duellman and Linda Trueb ; KU 142607–8 (subadult, female), 148549–51 (males, female), from 5.5 Km W Loja, 2330 m (04° 00' 48.99" S, 79° 13' 50.99" W), on 23 July 1971 by William E. Duellman and Linda Trueb; KU 202688 (male), from 5.2 km W Loja, 2310 m (03° 58' 58.73" S, 79° 16' 02.21" W), on 10 March 1984 by William E. Duellman; KU 217511–2 (males), from 6.8 km E Loja ca. <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.15611&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.9886112" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.15611/lat -3.9886112)">Loja-Zamora</a> line (03° 59' 19" S, 79° 09' 21.99" W), on 9 January 1990 by David Kizirian, John J. Wiens, and Luis A. Coloma .</p><p>Referred specimens. Ecuador: Loja: QCAZ 22370 (male), from Zamora Huayco, Loja, 3018 m (04°0 5' 49.98" S, 79° 10' 02.5" W), on 2 December 2002 by Diego Almeida-Reinoso; QCAZ 46319–20 (males), from Zamora Huayco, Loja, 3018 m (04° 05' 49.98" S, 79° 10' 02.5" W), on 5 December 2009 by Diego Almeida- Reinoso and Samael D. Padilla; CJ 1841–902 (62 juveniles), from Loja, Barrio La Palmera, Parroquia Sucre, on 22–25 April 2013 by Elicio E. Tapia .</p><p>Diagnosis. Included in the genus Gastrotheca by having a closed brood pouch on dorsum of female. A moderately large species (up to 67.5 mm SVL in female, 46.4–67.8 mm SVL in males, n = 13) with tibia length 42¯50% SVL, slightly longer than foot; (2) interorbital distance larger than the width of upper eyelid; (3) skin on dorsum finely granular, not co-ossified with skull, lacking transverse ridges; (4) supraciliary processes absent; (5) heel lacking calcar or tubercle; (6) tympanic annulus smooth to slightly granular; (7) Fingers I and II about equal in length, width of discs about twice width of the digits proximal to discs; (8) fingers unwebbed; (9) webbing between external toes extending nearly to antepenultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe IV and proximal to penultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe V; (10) in life, dorsum green, tan, brown, or reddish-brown with or without dark paravertebral marks; (11) head markings consisting of a pale labial stripe on the posterior margin of the lip, a black canthal stripe and a dark triangular interorbital mark in some individuals; (12) a fragmented, narrow, pale dorsolateral stripe present; (13) flanks bronze-brown, tan, or green with or without small pale spots; groin and anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs lightly mottled with tinges of green or blue; (14) venter cream with small brown flecks or spots; (15) brood pouch single, dorsal.</p><p>In comparison with similar species Gastrotheca elicioi is most like G. lojana, G. cuencana, G. litonedis, G. turnerorum, and G. pseustes in Ecuador and G. monticola in Peru. Gastrotheca elicioi differs from G. lojana, G. cuencana, and G. litonedis in color pattern as follows (compare these species in Fig. 10). Gastrotheca elicioi and G. litonedis have distinct dark canthal stripes, which are absent in G. lojana and inconspicuous or absent in G. cuencana . The groin and anterior and posterior surfaces of the thighs are slightly mottled in G. elicioi, whereas in G. lojana they are heavily mottled; these surface are translucent cream without marks in G. cuencana and usually brown in G. litonedis . If any marks are present on the dorsum in G. elicioi, they usually consist of a triangular interorbital mark, which is connected or not with two narrow and curved paravertebral marks. In contrast, in G. lojana the interorbital mark is a transverse bar usually connected with two broad paravertebral marks; in G. cuencana and G. litonedis an interorbital mark is absent. Gastrotheca lojana and G. cuencana have a conspicuous, elevated row of dorsolateral warts, whereas they are barely raised in G. elicioi and G. litonedis . Additionally, in G. elicioi the dark bars on the limbs, when present, are shorter, thinner and less defined than in G. lojana, whereas in G. cuencana and in some G. litonedis the bars are replaced by irregular blotches. Gastrotheca elicioi has a cream venter with dark flecks or marks, whereas the venter is uniform creamy white in G. cuencana and pale brownish gray in G. litonedis . Gastrotheca cuencana also differs from G. elicioi by having cream dorsal surfaces of the fingers, whereas they are brown, green, or tan in G. elicoi . Gastrotheca turnerorum and G. pseustes differ from G. elicioi (compare these species in Fig. 10) by having the skin on dorsum areolate and weakly areolate respectively, whereas in G. elicioi the skin on dorsum is finely granular. Also, they differ by lacking an interorbital mark, and bars on limbs, which can be present G. elicioi . Gastrotheca pseustes is sympatric with G. elicioi, from which it differs notably by having smaller digital discs (larger in G. elicioi) and lacking a pale dorsolateral and supracloacal stripes, which are fragmented in G. elicioi . Gastrotheca monticola is the sister species of G. elicioi and their minimum genetic divergence is 3.0% (in a DNA dataset of 438 bp, 16S gene). Gastrotheca monticola differs from G. elicioi by having the axilla and groin, concealed surfaces of the thighs, and the dorsal surfaces of the feet green with well-defined black spots on a green or tan background, whereas in G. elicioi the groin and anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs are lightly mottled with tinges of green or blue. Finally, the advertisement call of G. elicioi is unique amongst the calls of Gastrotheca in southern Ecuador, in that the long, pulsed notes are produced after the short ones, whereas the other species tend to produce the long, pulsated notes before the short ones.</p><p>Description of the holotype. An adult male (Fig. 12) collected as a tadpole and raised in the laboratory; body moderately robust; SVL 46.4 mm; head wider that long; snout rounded in dorsal view, bluntly rounded in profile; canthus rostralis round in section; loreal region concave, lips rounded; top of head flat; interorbital distance 142% of width of upper eyelid; internarial area elevated; nostrils not protuberant, directed anterolaterally, posterior to level of anterior margin of lower jaw; diameter of eye greater than its distance from nostril; tympanum round, separated from the eye in a distance approximately one and a half the diameter of tympanum; tympanic annulus and membrane smooth; supratympanic fold moderately weak, extending from corner of eye to tympanum and on to insertion of forelimb. Dentigerous vomerine processes narrowly separated medially, each bearing three teeth.</p><p>Arm robust; ulnar tubercles absent; hand and fingers moderately large (TFL 31% of SVL), unwebbed, with distinct narrow lateral fringes; discs much wider than digits, slightly truncated, width of disc on Finger III greater that diameter of tympanum; relative lengths of fingers I=II&lt;IV&lt;III; subarticular tubercles prominent, round, none bifid; supernumerary tubercles, small, numerous, rounded; palmar tubercle bifid, prepollical tubercle elliptical. Hind limb robust; tibia length 43% SVL; foot length 43% SVL; calcar and tarsal tubercles absent, inner tarsal fold on distal half of tarsus; outer metatarsal tubercle absent; inner metatarsal tubercle large, elliptical; toes moderately long; relative length of toes I&lt;II&lt;III&lt;V&lt;IV; basal webbing between Toes I and II; webbing formula for other toes II1— 2III 1— 2IV 2— 1V; subarticlular tubercles moderately small, rounded; supernumerary tubercles, numerous, rounded, present on proximal segments of digits. Nuptial pad absent.</p><p>Skin on dorsum finely granular; skin on flanks coarsely granular; skin on throat, venter surfaces of thighs, and arms granular; skin on belly areolate; skin on venter surfaces of shanks smooth; numerous small tubercles lateral to cloacal opening. Vocal sac single, median, subgular. Vocal slits present at posterior lingual margins of mandibles. Tongue broad, suboval, notched posteriorly, fully attached to mouth floor.</p><p>Coloration in life (See also under Comments). The dorsum is uniform brown becoming yellowish brown on the flanks. The dorsal surfaces of limbs have an olive-green tinge. A bronze labial stripe is present at the margin of the lip and continues to the insertion of the forelimb. A bronze inconspicuous and highly fragmented dorsolateral stripe is present; a black canthal stripe is present. The flanks are bronze-brown; the groin and anterior and posterior surfaces of the thighs are pale green with white and black spots. The venter is brownish gray with black and white marks; the gular region is gray dark. The iris is copper colored with a few black reticulations.</p><p>Coloration in preservative. The dorsum is gray without markings. A narrow pale, fragmented dorsolateral stripe is present. The dorsal surfaces of the limbs are tan with irregular gray blotches. A short pale labial stripe extends from the margin of the lip to the level of the insertion of forelimb; a dark canthal stripe is present. The flanks are dark gray anteriorly and pale gray posteriorly; the groin and anterior and posterior surfaces of the thighs are pale gray with black marks. The venter is cream with dark gray spots; the gular region is gray.</p><p>Measurements (in mm). SVL: 46.4, TIBL: 19.8, FL: 20.0, HL: 14.1, HW: 16.2, IOD: 4.9, EW: 4.6 IND: 3.3, ED: 5.6, EN: 4.1, TD: 2.2, FFL: 7.9, TFL: 14.6, TFD: 2.6.</p><p>Variation. Morphometric variation of one female and 13 males is summarized in Table 2. The female is larger than most males (67.5 mm; 56.0± 8.1 mm). The skin on the dorsum is finely granular. The tympanic annulus usually is smooth but is slightly granular in some individuals. Each dentigerous vomerine process has 6–8 teeth (6.3±1.5, n = 3).</p><p>Color variation in preservative. Preserved specimens have a bluish gray, pale gray, or brownish gray dorsum. Interorbital and paravertebral marks usually are present but the paravertebral marks may be absent. The dark gray interorbital mark, when present, is triangular in most specimens, but it is divided into two blotches in some specimens. A dark canthal stripe is present in all specimens. A short, pale labial stripe is inconspicuous in most specimens. The flanks are gray, darkest anteriorly, with or without white and dark flecks. The groin and anterior surfaces of thighs are pale gray with slight mottling in some; the posterior surfaces of the thighs are pale gray with black flecks and marks usually only distally. In some specimens, the dorsal surfaces of arms and limbs present short dark gray bars. The venter is white with evenly, or densely distributed dark marks.</p><p>Color variation in life. (Figs. 10H, 10I, 13–14). In living individuals the dorsum is uniform green (CJ 1843), reddish-brown (CJ 1400), or tan (CJ 1842), with or without contrasting dark gray paravertebral marks. When present, these paravertebral marks usually are narrow, curved, and fragmented; these marks are adherent at the scapular level and may be connected with the interorbital mark. A short cream labial stripe is present on the margin of the lip; the stripe continues posteriorly to the insertion of the forelimb. A dark brown canthal stripe is always present, but it is inconspicuous in some individuals with a dark ground color. The tympanum is brown, tan, or olive green. The iris is usually copper almost without black reticulations. A bronze highly fragmented dorsolateral stripe is present in most individuals. The flanks are brown, bronze-brown, or green. The groin has bluish coloration with slight mottling. The posterior surfaces of the thighs usually are pale green with black flecks and some specimens show black fringes. When present, supracloacal and heel stripes are cream and fragmented. The ventral surfaces usually are cream with dark marks, but some specimens lack dark marks. The gular surface varies from brownish gray to white with black spots. Duellman (1974) provided detailed descriptions of coloration in life of four adult males (KU 148549–51 and 142603, under the name Gastrotheca lojana).</p><p>Tadpoles. Tadpoles belong to Type IV tadpole of Orton (1953), and the exotroph, benthic ecomorphological guild. All measurements are expressed in millimeters. The following description is based on a specimen in Stage 36 (CJ 4311), from a series of 50 tadpoles (CJ 4311) obtained from a pond at Puntzará Alto, near Loja city, 2311 m, Province of Loja, Ecuador, by Luis A. Coloma, Manuel A. Morales-Mite, and Elicio E. Tapia on 28 January 2016. Total length 51.4; body length 19.4 (38% of total length). Body ovoid in dorsal and lateral views, slightly depressed; throat slightly concave in lateral profile, sloping from tip of snout to belly; body width at the level of spiracle 11.9, and height at same position 9.9; head width at level of eyes 11.1. Lateral line system present but barely visible, supraorbital and not evident at level of snout, infraorbital line present at level of the eye, touching the inferior portion of the orbit, and making contact with supraorbital line immediately behind the eye. Inferior oral line visible at the eye level, where it contacts angular line, which descends from eye level. Supraorbital line represented for scattered stiches, which does not make contact with the orbit. Posorbital line forming a circle of stitches, just behind the eye. Anterior oral line and loreal lines not visible; dorsal body and middle bodylines not visible.</p><p>Nostril medium sized (in proportion to body length), ovoid, protruding, having a fleshy annulus, its opening directed anterolaterally. Snout–nostril distance 3.5; internarial distance 2.9. Eye directed dorsally; eye length 2, eye width 1.8; interorbital distance 5. Spiracle sinistral, located at midbody level, spiracular opening oriented posteriorly; distance from tip of snout to spiracular opening 13.0; end of spiracular tube rounded, attached to body wall, inner wall of spiracular tube not evident; spiracle length 2.9, tube transverse width 2.9. Vent tube dextral, opening oriented posteriorly, tube length 3.4, vent tube transverse width 3. Tail length 32.4; caudal musculature slender, narrowing gradually until tail terminus; caudal muscle height 4.4, width 3.4; caudal fins well developed and proportional, arising abruptly near tail-body junction and forming a notorious hump, which makes and arc in the body plane. Dorsal fin height 4.18, ventral fin height 3.7; maximum height of tail 11.9; tail terminus rounded, caudal musculature not reaching fin terminus.</p><p>Oral disc small, ventral, located near tip of snout, not protruding laterally beyond body; transverse width 4.9. It is surrounded by an uniserial row of marginal papillae, interrupted medially on upper lip; lower lip papillae alternate in orientation, giving appearance of two rows. Upper lip with 23 papillae on right side and 20 papillae on left side; lower lip bearing 52 marginal papillae; upper jaw sheath medium-sized, forming a smooth arch and finely serrated, transverse width 2.6 (53% of oral disc width) height 0.4; lower jaw sheath V- shaped, open and finely serrated, width 4.1, height 1.3. Labial tooth row formula 2/3(1); tooth rows lengths: A1: 4.15, A2: 4.0, P1 right row 1.75, P1 left row 1.75, P1 gap 0.1, P2: 3.75, P3: 3.70. (Fig. 6D).</p><p>Color in life. Based on a specimen (CJ 4312a) in Stage 37 from a series (CJ 4312) obtained at Loja (neigborhood Puntzará Grande), Loja Province, Ecuador, by Luis A. Coloma, Manuel A. Morales-Mite, and Elicio E. Tapia on 28 January 2016 (Fig. 5D). In dorsal and ventral views, body dark brown. Snout and flanks dark brown; guts gray; red gills visible through the throat. Venter gray. Caudal musculature reddish brown with brown stippling, distal portion lacking pigments; dorsal and ventral fins gray with minute cream stippling. Vent tube translucent. Iris reddish-gold.</p><p>Variation. Variation of 28 meristic characters of tadpoles in Stages 31–40 (CJ 4306, 4310–13) are shown in Table 6. Total length varies between 15.8 (Stage 31) and 73.2 (Stage 39) and tail length proportion varies from 57% to 70% until Stage 38. Number of marginal papillae varies among specimens and Gosner stages; variation in number of ventral papillae at lower lip is high (43–64).</p><p>Based on specimens CJ 1950–2 from a series obtained at Loja (neigborhoods La Palmera and Puntzará Grande), Loja Province, Ecuador, by Elicio E. Tapia on 22–25 April 2013 (Fig. 15). We documented changes in coloration during ontogenetic development of one, mostly brown individual (CJ 1950) (Figs. 15 A–B). At Stage 40, the dorsum and flanks were cream and brown with a diffuse pattern of brown-gray paravertebral marks and a dark gray stripe bordering the canthus and body dorsolaterally, extending to about level of midbody, bordered dorsally by a diffuse cream area. The caudal musculature is pink proximally, with a gray suffusion distally. The caudal fins are pale gray. The iris is pale red. By Stage 46, the markings on the dorsum of body and limbs are diffuse gray and green on a dark brown background; the fingers and toes are yellowish cream dorsally. The flanks have a wide, brown-gray band. There are well-defined creamy white dorsolateral and labial stripes and supracloacal white marks. Color variation in six additional metamorphs (CJ 1951–2, CJ 4313) from Loja and Loja–Abra de Zamora, in Stage 46 is depicted in Figure 16. They vary from plain dark brown to plain green, and have a complete supracloacal stripe.</p><p>…….continued on the next page</p><p>…….continued on the next page</p><p>Comparisons. Tadpoles of Gastrotheca elicioi may occur in sympatry with those of G. lojana, G. psychrophila, G. pseustes, and G. turnerorum in the Loja-Abra de Zamora region. Gastrotheca elicioi differs from all of them by having a dorsal gray-pigmented fin that abruptly arises from the body, whereas is nearly translucent and arises gradually in the other species (compare in Fig 5). The tadpole described as G. psychrophila by Duellman (2015) is G. elicioi . It has a similar dorsal fin and fit well our description of G. elicioi tadpoles. Nonetheless, until tadpoles of G. psychrophila are described and unequivocally assigned to its species, some doubts will remain.</p><p>Vocalization. Seven individuals of Gastrotheca elicioi were recorded from three locations in Loja Province (one individual from the old Loja-Catamayo road, three from Loja, Parque Universitario de Educación Ambiental y Recreación (PUEAR) and one from Loja, Quebrada El Salado) and two individuals in the facilities of Centro Jambatu in San Rafael, Quito, Ecuador (Appendix III), inside outdoor enclosures. Descriptive statistics of the acoustic variables are provided in Table 5. The advertisement call of G. elicioi is a complex call, composed of up to 6, short, single-pulsed notes, and followed by up to 7 longer pulsed notes (Fig. 17 A–G). It can be characterized as a series of short notes, which become gradually longer, pulsated notes by the end of the call. The long notes have a mean duration of 0.188 s (SD = 0.150) and consists on average of 3.47 (SD = 1.695) distinct pulses, partly fused, without silent intervals (amplitude modulation close but less than 100%). The amplitude of the long note decreases gradually towards the end. The short notes have a mean duration of 0.027 s (SD = 0.014) and the inter-note interval is on average of 0.452 s (SD = 0.125). The mean dominant frequency of the call is 1249.4 Hz (SD = 169.862), with a mean 90% bandwidth of 807.1–1416.8 Hz. The fundamental frequency and harmonics are not clearly recognizable.</p><p>Comparisons. The advertisement call of Gastrotheca elicioi is unique amongst the calls of the Southern Ecuadorian species of Gastrotheca in that the long, pulsed notes are produced after the short ones, whereas the other species tend to produce the long, pulsed notes before the short ones. Also, the duration of the long notes of G. elicioi is significantly shorter and there are fewer pulses per long note, compared to all other species with complex calls from southern Ecuador (Table 5).</p><p>Distribution and ecology. Gastrotheca elicioi is known only from the vicinity of the city of Loja, Loja Province, in the Loja Basin and slopes of the adjacent cordilleras (Fig. 9). Its elevational range is 2026–3018 m in an area of extent of occurrence of about 102.7 km 2.</p><p>This nocturnal, semiarboreal species inhabits mostly disturbed areas and a few forests in the Evergreen Montane Forest from the south of the Cordillera Oriental of the Andes (Ministerio de Ambiente del Ecuador 2012), where the average annual rainfall is 764–1128 mm and the average annual temperature is 12.6–17.4 °C (Fick &amp; Hijmans 2017).</p><p>At the locality 5.5 km W of Loja, many Gastrotheca elicioi were found in a roadside agave fence-row, where they were sitting on the agave leaves (WED field notes, 17 July 1971). At the locality 5.2 km W of Loja, an individual of G. elicioi (KU 202688) was under an overhanging bank at the edge of small pond in a pasture by day (WED field notes, 10 March 1984). At Zamora Huayco, in the vicinity of Loja, two individuals were sitting on branches of shrubs at approximately 4–5 m above the ground; they were about 7 m from a river within moderately dense mountain forest (Diego Almeida-Reinoso field notes, 5 December 2009). Brooding females under captive conditions are depicted in Figures 10 H–I. The holotype was one of a series of 16 tadpoles that were at the edge of a pond. At the type locality, G. elicioi is syntopic with G. pseustes; G. elicioi is also syntopic with G. lojana . On 5 December 2017 a pregnant female G. elicioi was caught (Quebrada Shucos, Loja, Loja Province) by Diego Armijos-Ojeda and brought to the laboratory. After 20 days, the female deposited 434 tadpoles, in Gosner Stage 34 (CJ 7874). To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest number of tadpoles deposited by a female Gastrotheca . The female (SVL = 71.7 mm) weighed 43.06 g when caught and 24.38 g after she deposited the tadpoles.</p><p>Conservation status. We suggest that Gastrotheca elicioi should be considered as Endangered according to criteria B1ab(i,ii,iii,iv) of the IUCN Red List. We suggest this conservation status because of its small known area of occurrence (102.7 km 2) that is extremely fragmented. Its habitats are in heavily human populated areas. Loja and environs have been deforested and modified for human activities (Fig. 11 G–H). None of its populations is within the National System of Protected Areas (SNAP), but there is a population in the private Madrigal del Podocarpus Natural Reserve.</p><p>Etymology. The specific name elicioi is a patronym of Elicio E. Tapia, an Ecuadorian biologist and member of the Tapia family, whom have contributed substantially to the growth of biodiversity collections in Ecuador (Pollet 2003, Páez-Vacas et al. 2010). We highlight Elicio´s intense field collecting efforts and enormous contribution to the museums that hold Ecuadorian amphibians, including many tissues, call recordings, ecological data, and specimens of Gastrotheca reported here.</p><p>Comments. In the past, Gastrotheca elicioi was confused with G. lojana and G. monticola . It belongs to the subgenus Duellmania and is reported as species B in Duellman (2015: Fig 11.1). Specimens in captivity were not as brightly colored as specimens from the wild; however, the color in life of the holotype does not show remarkable differences from wild-collected specimens.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B1FD653FF21769BF74CF914	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
DF65A94B0B11D64BFF21772AF4FDFD52.text	DF65A94B0B11D64BFF21772AF4FDFD52.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca turnerorum Carvajal-Endara & Coloma & Morales-Mite & Guayasamin & Székely & Duellman 2019	<div><p>Gastrotheca turnerorum sp. nov.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: B72F71A3-671F-4F89-91D5-2410C1D0B6DF</p><p>Holotype. CJ 393 (Fig. 18), an adult female (collected as tadpole and raised in captivity), from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.42844&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-4.712289" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.42844/lat -4.712289)">Laguna Negra de Jimbura</a>, Parque Nacional Yacuri, Amaluza, 3406 m (04° 42' 44.24" S, 79° 25' 42.38" W), Loja Province, Ecuador, one of a series collected on 12 June 2011 by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara and Henry Grefa.</p><p>Paratypes. (Total 9: 6 males, 2 females, 1 juvenile). Ecuador: Loja: CJ 394–5 (female, male), 415–7 (males, juvenile), 1386 (female), and KU 335390 (male), collected with the holotype. CJ 7823 (male, collected as tadpole and captive raised), from Parque Nacional Yacuri, Amaluza, 3331 m (04° 43' 25.22" S, 79° 26' 15.47" W), Loja Province, Ecuador, one of a series collected on 7 July 2016 by Dan Cogǎlniceanu, Diana Székely and Paul Székely. Zamora Chinchipe: MUTPL 221, male from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.15827&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-4.4821057" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.15827/lat -4.4821057)">Reserva Tapichalaca</a>, 3073 m (04° 28' 55.58" S, 79° 09' 29.76" W), collected on 9 December 2014 by Diego Armijos-Ojeda .</p><p>Referred specimens. Ecuador: Zamora Chinchipe: QCAZ 9575 (captive raised tadpoles and juveniles) from Parque Nacional Podocarpus, Lagunas del Compadre, 3205 m (04° 10' 29.24" S, 79° 06' 59.54" W), on 1 December 1994 by Jenny Rudston; QCAZ 47299 (tadpole), QCAZ (sc 29154) (female) from Parque Nacional Podocarpus, Lagunas del Compadre, 3205 m (04° 10' 29.24" S, 79° 06' 59.54" W), on 20 October 2009 by Elicio E. Tapia .</p><p>Diagnosis. Included in the genus Gastrotheca by having a closed brood pouch on dorsum of female. A moderately large species (54.0– 58.2 mm SVL in females, n = 3; 50.0– 55.6 mm SVL in males, n = 4), with tibia length 37¯42% SVL, shorter than foot; (2) interorbital distance slightly greater than width of upper eyelid; (3) skin on dorsum areolate, not co-ossified with skull, lacking transverse ridges; (4) supraciliary processes absent; (5) heel lacking calcar or tubercle; (6) tympanic annulus smooth; (7) Finger I slightly shorter than Finger II, width of discs much wider than digits; (8) fingers unwebbed; (9) foot webbing between external toes extending to antepenultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe IV, to penultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe V; (10) in life, dorsum uniform green without dark paravertebral marks; (11) head markings consisting of pale labial and canthal stripes formed by a series of small bronze dotes; (12) dorsolateral stripe present, also consisting in a series of small bronze dotes; (13) flanks brown and groin green both with or without a few cream spots; anterior surfaces of thighs dark brown, posterior surfaces of thighs bluish brown with numerous cream tubercles proximal to the vent; (14) venter dark brown with uniformly distributed cream spots; gular region dark brown; (15) brood pouch single, dorsal.</p><p>Gastrotheca turnerorum most closely resembles three other species in southern Ecuador, G. pseustes, G. elicioi, and G. litonedis . Gastrotheca turnerorum differs from all of them by having a different skin texture on the dorsum, and a distinctive color pattern (compare Figs. 10J, 19–20 vs 10A–I, K, L). The dorsal skin is areolate in G. turnerorum, whereas it is weakly areolate or smooth in G. pseustes, finely granular in G. elicioi, and smooth in G. litonedis . In G. turnerorum the venter is dark brown with uniformly distributed cream spots, whereas it is cream with dark marks in G. pseustes and G. elicioi and pale brown-gray in G. litonedis . The labial stripe consists of a series of small bronze dots in G. turnerorum, and mostly uniform cream in G. pseustes, G. elicioi, and G. litonedis . Gastrotheca pseustes and G. elicioi have a dark brown canthal stripe, whereas G. turnerorum has a canthal stripe formed by a series of small bronze dots.</p><p>Gastrotheca turnerorum is the sister species of G. aguaruna + G. yacuri, with a genetic distance of at least 2.85 % (in a DNA dataset of 438 bp, 16S gene). The Peruvian G. aguaruna differs from G. turnerorum by having a weakly granular to smooth dorsal skin (areolate in G. turnerorum), Fingers I and II equal in length (Finger I shorter in G. turnerorum), and a cream venter with dark fleck or spots (venter dark brown with uniformly distributed cream spots in G. turnerorum).</p><p>Description of the holotype. An adult female (Fig. 18) that was collected as a tadpole and raised in the laboratory; body moderately robust; SVL 54.0 mm; head wider that long; snout rounded in dorsal view, bluntly rounded in profile; canthus rostralis round in section; loreal region concave; lips rounded; top of head flat; interorbital distance 89% of width of upper eyelid; internarial area flat; nostrils not protuberant, directed anterolaterally, posterior to level of anterior margin of lower jaw; diameter of eye greater than its distance from nostril; tympanum round, separated from the eye by distance about equal to diameter of tympanum; tympanic annulus barely evident;, supratympanic fold moderately weak, extending from behind the tympanum to the insertion of the forelimb. Dentigerous vomerine processes narrowly separated medially, each bearing five teeth.</p><p>Arm robust; ulnar tubercles absent; hand and fingers moderately large (TFL 34% of SVL); fingers unwebbed; discs large and rounded, width of disc of Finger III greater that diameter of tympanum; relative lengths of fingers I&lt;II&lt;IV&lt;III; subarticular tubercles prominent, round, conical in profile, none bifid; supernumerary tubercles, conical; palmar tubercle bifid, prepollical tubercle large, elliptical. Hind limb robust; tibia length 38% of SVL; foot length 46% of SVL; calcar and tarsal tubercles absent; inner tarsal fold approximately ¼ the length of the tarsus; outer metatarsal tubercle rounded; inner metatarsal tubercle elliptical elevated; toes moderately long; relative length of toes I&lt;II&lt;III&lt;V&lt;IV; basal webbing between Toes I and II; webbing formula for other toes II1— 2III 1— 2.5IV2— 1V; subarticular tubercles moderately large, rounded; supernumerary tubercles, numerous, and rounded.</p><p>Skin on dorsum weakly areolate; skin on flanks coarsely areolate; skin on throat, venter surfaces of thighs, and arms heavily areolate; skin on belly areolate; skin on venter surface of shanks smooth; numerous white tubercles ventrolateral to cloacal opening. Tongue broad, suboval, not notched posteriorly, fully attached to mouth floor. Pouch opening V- shaped with anterior border at level of posterior edge of sacrum.</p><p>Coloration in life. The dorsal surfaces of the head, body, and limbs are green; the inner and outer surfaces of the forearm, thighs, and shanks are brown (Fig. 18). Head markings are canthal and labial stripes that consist of a series of small bronze dots. The labial stripe continues to the insertion of the forelimb. The dorsolateral stripe also consists of a series of small bronze dots. The flanks are bronze-brown with some small white stippling; the groin is green. The anterior surfaces of the thighs are dark brown with some cream stippling; the posterior surfaces of the thighs are dark brown with cream tubercles lateral and below the vent. The ventral surfaces are dark brown with uniformly distributed cream spots. The iris is yellow-cream with brown reticulations and a brown horizontal bar across the eye.</p><p>Coloration in preservative. The dorsum is uniform bluish-gray. The pale labial, canthal, and dorsolateral stripes formed by a series of small bluish gray dots. The labial stripe continues to the insertion of the forelimb. The flanks, groin, and anterior surfaces of thighs are uniform dull gray; the posterior surfaces of thighs are dark gray with numerous white tubercles lateral to, and below, the cloacal opening. The ventral surfaces are uniform dark bluish-gray.</p><p>Measurements (in mm). SVL: 54.0, TIBL: 20.5, FL: 24.7, HL: 17.8, HW: 20.5, IOD: 4.9, EW: 5.6 IND: 3.4, ED: 5.6, EN: 4.3, TD: 2.3, FFL: 9.9, TFL: 18.5, TFD: 3.4.</p><p>Variation. Morphometric variation of three females and three males is summarized in Table 3. Females are larger than males (55.9± 2.1 mm; 52.7.± 2.5 mm). The skin on the dorsum varies from weakly to coarsely areolate. All adults have a supratympanic fold, which usually extends from the posterior edge of the tympanum to a point above the insertion of the forelimb.</p><p>Color variation in preservative. All preserved specimens have a uniformly bluish gray dorsum; labial, canthal, and dorsolateral stripes are formed by a series of small brown dots. The dorsal surfaces of hands and feet also have brown dots. The flanks, groin, and anterior surfaces of the thighs are uniform dull gray, but in some specimens the flanks are covered by small dark gray dots. The posterior surfaces of the thighs are dark gray with numerous white tubercles lateral to, and below the cloacal opening; a short, fragmented supracloacal stripe is present in some individuals. The ventral surfaces are uniform dark bluish-gray.</p><p>Color variation in life. (Figs. 10J, 18–19). The dorsum is uniform green (e.g., CJ 1386) or brown (e.g., CJ 7823). In CJ 1386, the dorsal surfaces of limbs are green, whereas the inner and outer surfaces of the forearms, thighs, and shanks are brown. Dorsal surfaces of hands and feet have a pattern of brown dots over a lighter background. Head markings are like those of the holotype; a dorsolateral stripe is present in all specimens. The flanks are bronze-brown with or without white stippling; the axillae and groin are green, with a bluish suffusion in some specimens. The anterior surfaces of thighs are dark brown with or without cream stippling and, and the posterior surfaces of thighs are dark brown with cream tubercles lateral to, and below, the vent. The ventral surfaces are dark brown with uniformly distributed cream dots, but some specimens have larger cream spots, thereby resulting in a paler venter.</p><p>Tadpoles. Tadpoles belong to Type IV tadpole of Orton (1953), and the exotroph, benthic ecomorphological guild. All measurements are expressed in millimeters. The following description is based on a specimen in Stage 39, from a series (CJ 1959) obtained from a pond at Laguna Negra de Jimbura, Parque Nacional Yacuri, 3406 m, Loja Province, Ecuador, by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara, and Henry Grefa on 12 June 2011 (Fig. 5F). Total length 61.3, body length 23.5 (38% of total length). Body robust, ovoid in dorsal and lateral views, slightly depressed; throat slightly concave in lateral profile; body width at level of spiracle 14.7, and height at same position 11.9; head width at level of eyes 12.9. Lateral-line system not evident. Nostril medium sized (in proportion to body length), ovoid, protruding, with a fleshy annulus, its opening directed anterolaterally. Snout–nostril distance 3.7. Eyes positioned and directed dorsally, eye length 2.4, eye width 2.2. Spiracle sinistral, located at midbody level; spiracular opening oriented posteriorly; distance from tip of snout to spiracle opening 15.9; spiracle end rounded, not free, attached to body wall, inner wall of spiracle not evident; tube length 3.4, tube transverse width 1.4. Vent tube dextral, the opening oriented posteriorly, tube length 4.0, tube transverse width 2.6. Tail length 38.8, caudal musculature robust in the two-thirds proximal to body, narrowing gradually until tail terminus; tail muscle height 5.4, tail muscle width 4.8; caudal fins thin at proximal half of tail, getting higher on distal half and raising near tail–body junction, dorsal fin height 3.5, ventral fin height 3.7; maximum height of tail 12.7; tail tip rounded, tail musculature not reaching fin terminus.</p><p>Oral disc small, ventral, located near tip of snout, not protruding laterally beyond body, not visible dorsally; transverse width 5.6. It is surrounded by an uniserial row of marginal papillae, interrupted medially in upper lip; lower lip papillae alternating in and out, giving the appearance of two series; upper lip with 18 papillae on right side and 17 papillae on left side; lower lip with 42 marginal papillae; upper jaw sheath medium-sized, forming a finely serrated, smooth arch, height 0.4, transverse width 3.3 (59% of oral disc width); lower jaw sheath V- shaped, open and finely serrated, width 2.4, height 0.7. Labial tooth row formula 2/3(1), tooth rows lengths: A1: 4.7, A2: 4.0, P1 right row 1.9, P1 left row 2.1, P1 gap 0.1, P2: 3.6, P3: 3.5. (Fig. 6E).</p><p>Color in preservative. Dorsum dull gray, with darker areas on flanks, above the eyes and on the throat; body contour and snout translucent. Caudal musculature and fins with scattered, white spots, densely arranged near tailbody junction; fins otherwise translucent. Venter dark gray; eyes lavender gray, oral apparatus translucent.</p><p>Color in life. (CJ 1957, Stage 36). Fig. 5F. In dorsal and lateral views, body tan, speckled with black; areas around the snout are lighter. Venter cream with black markings, semi-translucent; guts visible as a darker area; throat translucent with small cream flecks; gills evident as a red hue. Caudal musculature reddish-pink in proximal half, decreasing its intensity towards distal half; myomeres and nerves barely visible; caudal musculature and fins with cream marks, clustered in dorsal line of caudal musculature, otherwise caudal fins translucent. Legs cream. Oral apparatus light cream. Iris copper-yellow, with small black reticulations.</p><p>Variation. Variation of 26 meristic characters of tadpoles in Stages 35–39 (CJ 1959) are shown in Table 7. Total length varies between 61.3 (Stage 39) and 75.0 (Stage 35); tail length proportion varied from 63.2 to 67.0 until Stage 39; labial tooth row formula was 2/3(1). Number of marginal papillae varied among specimens and Gosner stages, variation in lower lip papillae is high (42–57).</p><p>......continued on the next page</p><p>We documented changes in coloration during ontogenetic development of CJ 1958–9 (Fig. 20). At Stage 36, the dorsum and flanks are pale brown with dark brown areas on posterior body and flanks. By Stage 42, dorsal surfaces of body and limbs are uniform green; fine, cream, dorsolateral stripes are present, extending to midbody. Cream stripes border the outer dorsal margins of the limbs. At Stage 46, dorsal surfaces of body and limbs have more well-defined cream stripes, and a cream labial stripe; the canthus rostralis is green, and remaining flanks are mostly dark brown with an upper diffuse black-stripe. Dorsal surfaces of fingers and toes are brown except on finger and toe discs, which are yellowish-cream. The iris is copper-yellow, lacking the brown horizontal band that is observed in adults.</p><p>Comparisons. Tadpoles of Gastrotheca turnerorum may occur in sympatry with those of G. elicioi, G. lojana, G. psychrophila, and G. pseustes, in the Loja-Abra de Zamora region. Gastrotheca turnerorum differs from G. elicioi by lacking a dorsal gray-pigmented fin that abruptly arises from the body; from G. lojana by having a more rounded tail terminus and having bold cream marks in a dorsal line of caudal musculature, and from G. pseustes by having a more rounded tail terminus (compare in Fig. 5). For G. psychrophila, see remarks under G. elicioi tadpole account.</p><p>Distribution and ecology. Gastrotheca turnerorum only is known from three localities in the Cordillera Oriental of the Andes in southern Ecuador. These localities are in Parque Nacional Yacuri, Parque Nacional Podocarpus, and Reserva Tapichalaca in Zamora Chinchipe and Loja provinces. Its elevational range is 3073–3406 m in an area of extent of occurrence of about 450 km 2.</p><p>This mostly nocturnal, semiarboreal species inhabits mainly paramos and a few forests in the Evergreen Shrub and Herbazal of Paramo, and the Evergreen Montane Forest of Catamayo-Alamor (Ministerio de Ambiente del Ecuador 2012), where the average annual rainfall is 895–1278 mm and the average annual temperature is 10.4– 13.5 °C (Fick &amp; Hijmans 2017).</p><p>At the Lagunas del Compadre in the Parque Nacional Podocarpus, a gravid female was collected on 1 December 1994. It deposited tadpoles on 12 December in the laboratory, some of them were raised, and others were preserved. On 20 September 2009, another female with eggs in her pouch was found at the same locality. It was sitting on moss at approximately 2 m from the Río Sabanilla, which is about 1.5 km from Lagunas del Compadre. The holotype, from Laguna Negra de Jimbura in the Parque Nacional Yacuri (Fig. 11C), was found at the edge of a pond about 3 x 2 m at the edge of a lagoon, at 14:00 h. The water temperature was 16.4° C, and water pH was 5.3. Eighteen tadpoles were collected at this pond. Another group of tadpoles was found at 18:00 h; at the same locality in another lagoon, the water temperature was 7.4 ° C. Strong winds blow across the lagoon, and only a small patch of forest remained at one border (Elicio E. Tapia field notes, 12 June 2011). A brooding female is depicted in Figure 10J.</p><p>Conservation status. We suggest that Gastrotheca turnerorum should be considered as an Endangered species according to criteria B2ab(i,ii,iii) of the IUCN Red List. Although this species occurs at the Yacuri and Podocarpus National Parks, we suggest this conservation status because of its small known area of occurrence (159 km 2) that is vulnerable to improperly regulated tourism activities (Aguirre 2001), introduced species such as trout, climate change, and pathogens. Laguna Negra de Jimbura has suffered the synergistic effects of agriculture, cattle and sheep raising, fires, introduced species, pesticide use, and unregulated tourism activitites.</p><p>Etymology. The specific name turnerorum is a latinized word that honors the Turner family. As unique as this marsupial frog is to the amphibian world, the Turner family stands out in their exceptional, unwavering and ever- growing commitment to conservation of the world natural resources. From Ted Turner’s pioneering efforts to protect very large land areas and restore them to their original and natural states of clean water and abundant fauna and flora to granddaughter Elizabeth’s awareness-raising book “Our friends the frogs,” there are multiple generations of active conservationists with a true appreciation for the value of all of our natural resources. In 1991, Laura Turner Seydel (with father Ted) co-founded the Captain Planet Foundation and continues to work diligently to inspire the same appreciation for conservation and sustainable living in the next generation of young people who will surely be making big decisions that will affect the health of our planet for themselves and their own grandchildren. Through the camera’s eye, Rhett Turner has managed to put conservation issues such as the pollinator perils and amphibian crisis in front of millions of people. Through the Turner Endangered Species Fund, there is hope for dozens of threatened species of plants and animals in the US and abroad that was not there before. Together, the Turner family has put their hearts, souls, and personal resources into helping make the planet a better place for the next generation.</p><p>Comments. Gastrotheca turnerorum belongs to the subgenus Gastrotheca as reported as species C in Duellman (2015: Fig 12.1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B11D64BFF21772AF4FDFD52	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
DF65A94B0B09D640FF2172E8F4FDFC7C.text	DF65A94B0B09D640FF2172E8F4FDFC7C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca yacuri Carvajal-Endara & Coloma & Morales-Mite & Guayasamin & Székely & Duellman 2019	<div><p>Gastrotheca yacuri sp. nov.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 6261932E-02AB-4C9E-B2BD-BD213BBDC771</p><p>Holotype. CJ 7822 (Figs. 21–22), an adult male, from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.45002&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-4.702325" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.45002/lat -4.702325)">El Salado de Jimbura</a>, at about 2.5 km (by road) west from the entrance in the Parque Nacional Yacuri, 2914 m (04° 42' 08.37" S, 79° 27' 00.09" W), Loja Province, Ecuador, collected on 9 April 2016 by Paul Székely and Diana Székely.</p><p>Paratype. Ecuador: Loja: QCAZ 21105, adult male, from El Salado de Jimbura, 2712 m, on 26 June 2002 by Fernando Nogales Sornoza .</p><p>Referred specimen. Ecuador: Loja: Not collected (Fig. 11O), subadult, 43 mm SVL, from nearby of Lagunas Negras, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.43044&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-4.708836" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.43044/lat -4.708836)">Parque Nacional Yacuri</a>, 3492 m (04° 42' 31.81" S, 79° 25' 49.61" W) .</p><p>Diagnosis. Included in the genus Gastrotheca by molecular evidence and general morphological similarity with species of Gastrotheca . Although females are unknown, we infer presence of dorsal brood pouch because all its closely related species have it. A moderately large species (57.4–58.9 mm SVL in males, n = 2) with tibia length 47¯49% SVL, larger than foot; (2) interorbital distance greater than width of upper eyelid; (3) skin on dorsum weakly granular to smooth, co-ossified with skull, having a transverse ridge at occipital region; (4) supraciliary processes absent; (5) heel lacking calcar or tubercle; (6) tympanic annulus smooth; (7) Finger I shorter than Finger II, width of discs much wider than digits; (8) fingers unwebbed; (9) toes one-half webbed, webbing extending to antepenultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe IV, to penultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe V; (10) in life, dorsum uniform green or brown with brown paravertebral marks; (11) head markings consisting of brown labial stripe with cream glandular areas at posterior end, canthal and supraciliary stripe of black, brown, and bronze; (12) dorsolateral stripe absent or present, when present above consisting in a series of bronze and cream warts, bordered below with a black and brown line, (13) flanks brown and green with a blue and black reticulum towards the lower flanks, axillae, groin, anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs, shanks, and tarsus; brown pelvic patch; (14) venter cream with nearly uniformly distributed, small, dark brown marks or brown with cream marks; gular region dark brown in males.</p><p>Gastrotheca yacuri differs from all other species of Gastrotheca in southern Ecuador by having a blue and black reticulated pattern on flanks, axilla, groin, thighs, and shanks. It most closely resembles two other species, G. pseustes and G. psychrophila by having the blue colors, but they lack a blue and black reticulum (compare these species in Fig. 10). Gastrotheca yacuri differs from its sister species, G. aguaruna, from the Cordillera Central in northern Peru, by lacking blue colors, having the skin co-ossified with skull, and being smaller (SVL of males of G. yacuri 57.4–58.9 mm vs 41.6–46.8 mm in G. aguaruna). The genetic distance between them is of at least 2.8 % (in a DNA dataset of 438 bp, 16S gene).</p><p>Description of the holotype. An adult male (Figs. 21–22); body moderately robust; SVL 57.4 mm; head wider that long; snout slightly acuminate in dorsal view, bluntly rounded in profile; canthus rostralis angular in section; loreal region concave; lips rounded; top of head flat; interorbital distance 92% of width of upper eyelid; internarial area flat; nostrils not protuberant, directed anterolaterally, at about level of anterior margin of lower jaw; diameter of eye greater than its distance from nostril; tympanum round, separated from the eye by distance about equal to diameter of tympanum; tympanic evident; supratympanic fold elevated, extending from behind the tympanum to the insertion of the forelimb. Dentigerous vomerine processes narrowly separated medially, each bearing four teeth.</p><p>Arm robust; ulnar tubercles absent; hand and fingers moderately large (TFL 28% of SVL); fingers unwebbed bearing fringes; discs large and rounded, width of disc of Finger III lesser that diameter of tympanum; relative lengths of fingers I&lt;II&lt;IV&lt;III; subarticular tubercles prominent, round, in lateral profile, none bifid; supernumerary tubercles small and nearly indistinct; palmar tubercle bifid, prepollical tubercle large, elliptical. Hind limb robust; tibia length 47% of SVL; foot length 43% of SVL; calcar and tarsal tubercles absent; inner tarsal fold approximately ¼ the length of the tarsus; outer metatarsal tubercle rounded; inner metatarsal tubercle absent; toes moderately long; relative length of toes I&lt;II&lt;III&lt;V&lt;IV; webbing absent between Toes I and II, but bearing fringes; webbing formula for other toes II2— 3III 2— 4IV 3— 2V; subarticular tubercles moderately large, rounded; supernumerary tubercles small, numerous, and rounded.</p><p>Skin on dorsum smooth to shagreen; smooth occipital ridge present; U-shaped ridges (vestigial) in sacrum region; skin on flanks rugose and coarsely areolate; skin on throat loose bearing folds of smooth vocal sac; skin on ventral surfaces of thighs, arms, and belly heavely areolate; skin on venter surface of shanks smooth; rugose surfaces around cloacal opening. Tongue broad, suboval, not notched posteriorly, fully attached to mouth floor.</p><p>Coloration in life. The dorsal surfaces of the head, body, and limbs are green; the hidden surfaces of the forearm, thighs, and shanks are reticulated with black and blue markings (Figs. 21–22). Head markings are brown canthal and labial stripes. The canthal stripe is diffuse; the labial stripe varies from brown anteriorly to white posteriorly until the insertion of the forelimb. The dorsolateral stripe is thin and consists of a series of bronze and cream warts, bordered below with a black and brown line. The flanks are brown and green with a blue and black reticulum towards the lower flanks, axillae, groin, anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs, shanks, and tarsus; the pelvic patch is brown. The venter is cream with nearly uniformly distributed, small, dark brown marks; gular sac is nearly uniform grayish-brown with small dark brown marks. Palms and soles are pinkish gray; ventral fingers and toes are fleshy. The iris is copper with abundant black reticulations.</p><p>Coloration in preservative. Similar to coloration in life, but green and blue surfaces have begun to fade.</p><p>Measurements (in mm). SVL: 57.4, TIBL: 27.2, FL: 24.8, HL: 17.1, HW: 19.2, IOD: 6.9, EW: 5.2, IND: 2.8, ED: 6.0, EN: 3.0, TD: 3.3, FFL: 8.2, TFL: 16.2, TFD: 2.8.</p><p>Variation. Morphometric variation of the male paratype is as follows: SVL: 58.9, TIBL: 28.6, FL: 28.3, HL: 17.9, HW: 20.1, IOD: 6.7, EW: 4.3, IND: 2.8, ED: 5.6, EN: 5.0, TD: 3.0, FFL: 10.8, TFL: 19.0, TFD: 2.7.</p><p>The skin on the dorsum varies in the subadult by lacking a smooth tranverse occipital ridge.</p><p>Color variation in life. The referred subadult specimen varies from the holotype in that it is mostly brown; it has a light reddish-brown dorsum of body and limbs with darker, well-defined stripes, two paravertebral and one at the coccyx position; scattered black spots are present on dorsum towards the flanks (Fig. 10O). The loreal region is brown, and a thin dark brown canthal line is present; the labial stripe is dark brown and bordered along its upper margin by a thin pale stripe that varies from brown anteriorly to cream posteriorly until the insertion of the forelimb. There is no dorsolateral stripe but the reddish-brown dorsal color contrasts with a broad dark brown band on the flanks. The flanks are brown with black and cream marks (without blue colors). The venter is mostly brown with cream marks that are larger towards the chest; the gular region is slightly darker that the venter. The palms and soles are gray. The iris is cooper with black reticulations and has a shade of red in the lower half.</p><p>Vocalization. Four individuals of Gastrotheca yacuri were recorded at El Salado, Loja Province (Appendix III). Descriptive statistics of the acoustic variables are provided in Table 5. The advertisement call is a complex call, composed of one to three (usually two) long pulsed notes and followed (or not) by one to three (usually two) short, single-pulsed notes (Fig. 23 A–G). The long note had a mean duration of 0.634 s (SD = 0.091) and consisted on average of 32.24 (SD = 7.504) distinct pulses, partly fused, without silent intervals (amplitude modulation close but less than 100%). The amplitude of the long note increases gradually towards the middle of the note after which it decreases gradually by the end. The short notes had a mean duration of 0.072 s (SD = 0.020) and the inter-note interval was on average of 0.549 s (SD = 0.214). The mean dominant frequency of the call was 1496.7 Hz (SD = 38.643), with a mean 90% bandwidth frequency of 1366.7–1637.9 Hz, having the highest values recorded among the analyzed species. The fundamental frequency is recognizable; when visible, 5 to 7 harmonics are distinguishable.</p><p>Comparisons. The advertisement call of Gastrotheca yacuri is most similar to that of G. pseustes, but G. yacuri has a much shorter call duration, shorter long notes duration, shorter inter-note interval, a higher dominant frequency, and a higher 90% bandwidth frequency compared with the call of G. pseustes (Table 5). Also, G. yacuri emits usually only two short notes compared with 4–6 short notes of G. pseustes . The call of G. yacuri can be easily distinguished form those of G. lojana and G. testudinea by the amplitude modulation of the longer note, longer call duration, lower short note rate, larger number of pulses, higher pulse rate, a much higher dominant frequency, and higher 90% bandwidth frequency. Also, G. yacuri emits up to three (usually two) long notes per call compared with the only one emitted by G. lojana and G. testudinea (Table 5).</p><p>Distribution and ecology. Gastrotheca yacuri is only known from three nearby localities 2.8 km apart (maximum distance) at elevations of 2712–3492 m in the Cordillera Oriental de los Andes in southern Ecuador. One locality is within Parque Nacional Yacuri and the others are in El Salado de Jimbura in Loja Province (Fig. 9). This nocturnal, semiarboreal species inhabits paramo and subparamo in the Evergreen Montane Forest of Catamayo-Alamor (Ministerio de Ambiente del Ecuador 2012), where the average annual rainfall is 895–1159 mm and the average annual temperature is 10.4–14.6 °C (Fick &amp; Hijmans 2017). The male holotype was found near the road, calling from the branches of a bush, at about 3.5 m above ground. In this same location, choruses were heard from April to late July 2016; the males were calling usually from the vegetation nearby the road. An additional subadult was found during the day in a large terrrestrial bromeliad (Fig. 24A, B). Females and tadpoles are unknown. In this location, in Parque Nacional Yacuri, Gastrotheca yacuri is syntopic with G. turnerorum .</p><p>Conservation status. We suggest that Gastrotheca yacuri should be assigned to the Data Deficient category according to guidelines of the IUCN (2001), given the inadecuacy of the current information to establish its status. Further searches and definition of its distribution, area of occupancy, habitat use, and biological information are required. Currently its known area of occurrence is less than 10 km 2, thus it could qualify for a Critically Endangered category; however, we can reasonably predict that if further surveys are conducted within the protected Yacuri National Park, its area will increase to more than 100 km 2. In any case, Lagunas Negras de Jimbura have suffered the synergistic effects of agriculture, cattle and sheep raising, fires, introduced species such as trout, pesticide use, and unregulated tourism activitites. Areas in the Salado de Jimbura that are out of the Yacuri National Park already have been heavily modified by human actions.</p><p>Etymology. The specific name yacuri is a noun in apposition and refers to the Yacuri National Park, where this species has been found. According to Chamba-Troya (2017), Yacuri takes its name from the Quechua words Yacu meaning water and Quri that means gold. Ecuador's southernmost national park ranges from 2000 to 3700 meters in the Cordillera Oriental. This park of 43,090,60 hectares is unique by sheltering a series of 48 glacial lakes, and many endemic species of flora and fauna. It is a Ramsar site (The Convention on Wetlands) and part of the Podocarpus-El Cóndor Biosphere Reserve declared by UNESCO.</p><p>Comments. Gastrotheca yacuri belongs to the subgenus Gastrotheca, and is reported as Species D in Duellman (2015: Fig 12.1).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B09D640FF2172E8F4FDFC7C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
DF65A94B0B02D63EFF2173C2F134F837.text	DF65A94B0B02D63EFF2173C2F134F837.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca litonedis Duellman & Hillis 1987	<div><p>Gastrotheca litonedis Duellman &amp; Hillis 1987</p><p>Holotype. KU 202690 (Figs. 10A, 25A), an adult female, from 10 km (by road) northeast of <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.10789&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.1199443" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.10789/lat -3.1199443)">Girón</a>, 2750 m (03° 07' 11.8" S, 79° 06' 28.4'' W), Azuay Province, Ecuador, obtained on 7 March 1984 by William E. Duellman.</p><p>Referred specimens. (Total 28: 13 males, 15 females). Ecuador: Azuay: CJ 386 ¯9 (females), 401¯4 (females, male), 1404¯8 (males), KU 335388–9 (male, female), <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.26362&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.154389" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.26362/lat -3.154389)">San Fernando</a>, Laguna de Busa, 2834 m (03° 09' 15.8" S, 79° 15' 49.03" W), collected on 9 June 2011 by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara and Henry Grefa ; QCAZ 42734 (female), <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.26362&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.154389" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.26362/lat -3.154389)">San Fernando</a>, Laguna de Busa, 2834 m (03° 09' 15.8" S, 79° 15' 49.03" W), collected on 27 October 2007 by Sofía Carvajal-Endara, Amaranta Carvajal-Campos and Andrea Carvajal-Endara ; QCAZ 42855 (female), 42857¯9 (females), 42861 (female), 42866 (male), 42871 (male), <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.26362&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.154389" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.26362/lat -3.154389)">San Fernando</a>, Laguna de Busa, 2834 m (03° 09' 15.8" S, 79° 15' 49.03" W), collected on 18–20 August 2008 by Sofía Carvajal-Endara ; QCAZ 49973 ¯4 (female, male), 49976¯8 (males), <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.19355&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.1333807" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.19355/lat -3.1333807)">San Gerardo</a>, 2854 m (03° 08' 00.17" S, 79° 11' 36.78" W), collected on 1 December 2010 by Sofía Carvajal-Endara .</p><p>Diagnosis. Included in the genus Gastrotheca by having a closed brood pouch on dorsum of female. A moderately large species (53.5– 62.4 mm SVL in females, n = 22; 48.9–57.4 mm SVL in males, n = 13) with tibia length 40¯54% SVL, slightly longer than foot; (2) interorbital distance about 1.5 times width of upper eyelid; (3) skin on dorsum smooth, not co-ossified with skull, lacking transverse ridges; (4) supraciliary processes absent; (5) heel lacking calcar or tubercle; (6) tympanic annulus distinct, smooth; (7) Fingers I and II about equal in length, width of discs notably wider than digits; (8) fingers unwebbed; (9) webbing between external toes extending to the penultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe IV, to the distal subarticular tubercle on Toe V; (10) in life, dorsum green, brown, or tan with or without dark paravertebral marks or dark flecks; (11) head markings consisting of a pale cream labial stripe and narrow dark brown canthal stripe; (12) pale creamy white dorsolateral stripe present; (13) flanks, anterior surfaces of thighs and groin pale brown or tan slightly molted in some, posterior surfaces of thighs dark brown–gray with pale cream warts in some; (14) venter pale brownish gray; (15) brood pouch single, dorsal.</p><p>Gastrotheca litonedis most closely resembles five other species in southern Ecuador— G. cuencana, G. plumbea, G. pseustes, G. turnerorum, and G. elicioi . Gastrotheca litonedis differs from all of them by having a pale brownish gray venter; whereas, the venter is uniform creamy white in G. cuencana, cream in G. plumbea, cream with dark flecks or spots in G. pseustes and G. elicioi, and bronze or dark brown in G. turnerorum . Gastrotheca litonedis, like G. plumbea, has smooth skin on the dorsum, whereas it is finely granular in G. elicioi and G. cuencana, weakly areolate to smooth in G. pseustes and areolate in G. turnerorum . A pale supracloacal stripe is present in G. litonedis, G. pseustes, and G. turnerorum, but it is absent in G. cuencana and G. plumbea . Gastrotheca pseustes differs further from G. litonedis by having a complex call structure (long and short pulsed-notes), which is simple in G. litonedis (only short pulsed-notes). The sister species of G. litonedis is the parapatric G. cuencana . Distinctive morphological and coloration features (compare Figs. 26–27, vs 2–4) are (character states for G. cuencana in parentheses): Gastrotheca litonedis is larger than G. cuencana (SVL student’s t-test: t = -6.725, df = 99, p &lt;0.001), has a bluntly rounded snout in profile (rounded snout inclined anteroventrally in profile); a narrow dark brown canthal stripe is present (absent or inconspicuous), a row of barely elevated dorsolateral warts (conspicuous, elevated), green, tan or brown dorsal surfaces of fingers (fingers cream dorsally), posterior surfaces of thighs dark brown (translucent cream with pale tinge blue or green). The call of G. litonedis has a higher note rate, longer note duration, shorter inter-note interval, higher dominant frequency, and higher 90% bandwidth frequency compared with G. cuencana . Finally, these two species also differ by having a genetic distance of 1.2 % (in a DNA dataset of 438 bp, 16S gene).</p><p>Gastrotheca litonedis is syntopic with G. lojana and G. pseustes 2, from which it differs notably by the texture of skin on dorsum, ventral coloration, and call structure. The skin on the dorsum is smooth in G. litonedis, whereas it is finely granular in G. lojana and coarsely granular in G. pseustes 2; furthermore, both species have cream venters with dark flecks, spots, or mottling, and a complex call structure with long and short pulsed-notes ( G. lojana call in Fig. 17 H–N).</p><p>Variation. Morphometric variation of 22 females and 13 males (from Duellman 2015) is summarized in Table 3. Females are larger than males (58.0± 2.4 mm; 53.8± 2.8 mm). The skin on the dorsum is mostly smooth in most specimens; however, in some specimens it is weakly areolate. All adults have a moderate supratympanic fold, which usually extends from the upper part of the tympanum to a point above the insertion of the forelimb. Some individuals have several small rounded tubercles anterolateral to the tympanum. Each dentigerous vomerine process has 2–10 teeth (5.4±1.6, n = 34).</p><p>Color variation in preservative. In most specimens the dorsum is bluish gray without marks; in a few specimens faint paravertebral marks are present. The narrow canthal stripe, flanks, and posterior surfaces of thighs are dark brown. A creamy white supralabial stripe from the posterior margin of the lip to the insertion of the forelimb is prominent in all specimens. Creamy white dorsolateral, supracloacal and heel stripes are present. On the posterior part of the flanks the coloration varies from small white flecks to mottling on a dark brown ground color. The anterior surfaces of the thighs are usually gray with black flecks or spots. The ventral surfaces are uniform dull gray in most specimens; some have a pale gray venter with evenly distributed dark flecks and spots, and in CJ 1412 the venter is pale gray with black markings. Some specimens have a faint tinge of pale blue on the ventral surfaces of the shanks. Males have a cream nuptial pad on the medial surface of the thumb.</p><p>Color variation in life. (Figs. 26, 27). The dorsum varies from uniform green (QCAZ 42858), to brown (CJ 404); in some individuals dark paravertebral marks and dark brown flecks are present (QCAZ 49977). The ventral surfaces are pale gray in most specimens; some have evenly distributed dark flecks and spots, and some have a faint bluish tinge on the ventral surfaces (QCAZ 49977). A narrow dark brown canthal stripe is present; a cream supralabial stripe extends from the posterior margin of the lip to the insertion of the forelimb. The tympanum is brown, tan, or olive green. The iris is reddish bronze with dense black reticulations. The posterior surfaces of the thighs are dark brown or cream with orange flecks. A cream dorsolateral stripe is evident in most individuals. The flanks, groin, and anterior surface of the thighs usually are bronze-brown or tan with cream or dark flecks and spots. In some individuals a pink-orange tinge is present in the groin (Fig. 27). The supracloacal and heel stripes are cream or tan, and the ventral surfaces of the shanks have a faint pale blue tinge.</p><p>Tadpoles. Tadpoles belong to Type IV tadpole of Orton (1953), and the exotroph, benthic ecomorphological guild. All measurements are expressed in millimeters. The following description is based on a specimen in Stage 37 (CJ 6558), from a series of 79 tadpoles (CJ 6557) born and reared in laboratory conditions, from a mother collected when gravid in the field (CJ 6018) at Laguna de Busa, 2780 m, Azuay Province, Ecuador, by Manuel A. Morales-Mite on 0 6 January 2016 (Fig. 5A).</p><p>Total length 52.8; body length 19.4 (37% of total length). Body ovoid in dorsal and lateral views, slightly depressed; throat slightly concave in lateral profile, sloping from tip of snout to belly; body width at the level of spiracle 12.5, and height at same position 10.3, head width at level of eyes 10.0. Lateral line system present but barely visible, supraorbital and infraorbital lines not evident at level of snout, infraorbital line present at level of the eye, touching the inferior portion of the orbit, and making contact with supraorbital line immediately behind the eye. Postorbital line represented by three stitches arranged in line and forming a 45-degree angle with the body plane. Angular line, anterior oral line and loreal lines not visible; dorsal body and middle body lines not visible. Nostril medium sized (in proportion to body length), ovoid, protruding, having a fleshy annulus, its opening directed anterolaterally. Snout–nostril distance 4.2; internarial distance 2.8. Eyes dorsally positioned; eye length 1.9, eye width 1.8; interorbital distance 5.2. Spiracle sinistral, located at midbody level, spiracular opening oriented posteriorly; distance from tip of snout to spiracular opening 12.9; end of spiracular tube rounded, attached to body wall, inner wall of spiracular tube not evident; spiracle length 2.7, spiracle transverse width 3.5. Vent tube dextral, opening oriented posteriorly, tube length 2.5, tube transverse width 2.2. Tail length 33.3; caudal musculature slender, narrowing gradually until tail terminus; caudal muscle height 4.1, width 3.6; caudal fins well developed and proportional, dorsal fin arising abruptly near tail-body junction; dorsal fin height 4.1, ventral fin height 3.7; maximum tail height 9.2; tail terminus rounded, caudal musculature not reaching fin terminus.</p><p>Oral disc small, ventral, located near tip of snout, not protruding laterally beyond body; transverse width 5.8. It is surrounded by a uniserial row of marginal papillae, interrupted medially on upper lip. Lower lip papillae alternate in orientation, giving appearance of two rows; upper lip with 23 papillae on right side and 23 papillae on left side; lower lip bearing 57 marginal papillae. Upper jaw sheath medium-sized, forming a smooth arch and finely serrated, transverse width 2.9 (50% of width of oral width) and height 0.3. Lower jaw sheath V- shaped, open and finely serrated, width 2.6, and height 0.7. Labial tooth row formula 2/3(1); tooth rows lengths: A1: 4.5, A2: 4.4, P1 right row 1.65, P1 left row 2.0, P1 gap 0.2, P2: 4.1, P3: 3.95. (See also Fig. 6A of CJ 5292, Stage 35).</p><p>Color in life. Based on a specimen in Stage 34 from a series (CJ 1947) obtained from San Fernando, Laguna de Busa, Azuay Province, 2834 m, by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara, and Henry Grefa on 9 June 2011 (Fig. 6A). In dorsal view, body olive-gray, head and tail suffused with pink and cream. Flanks cream anteriorly to olivegray posteriorly. In ventral view, cream anteriorly in gular region; followed posteriorly by red gills visible troughout the throat, and olive-gray guts. Caudal musculature pink proximally, gradually becoming gray posteriorly; dorsal and ventral fins translucent, with olive stippling distributed regularly along length of tail except distally, where stippling diminishes. Spiracle and oral apparatus nearly translucent. Iris gold.</p><p>Variation. Variation of 28 meristic characters of tadpoles in Stages 33–40 (CJ 5447, 5449, 5464–67, 6557, 6558) are shown in Table 8. Total length varies between 31.4 (Stage 33) and 61.9 (Stage 40) and tail length proportion varies from 58% to 69% until Stage 40. Number of marginal papillae varies among specimens and Gosner stages; variation in number of ventral papillae at lower lip is high (39–66).</p><p>We documented changes in coloration during ontogenetic development of CJ 1947 (Fig. 28A–C). At Stage 39, the dorsum and flanks are olive-gray with a diffuse pattern of gray paravertebral marks. By Stage 41, dorsum of body and limbs is green with well-defined dark green paravertebral marks; a cream dorsolateral stripe is bordered below by a fine black line; a creamy white stripe is present on face where upper lip will be formed. The flanks are greenish gray. At Stage 46, the dorsum is nearly uniform green; the paraverterbal marks are barely evident. The flanks are brown, and the iris is red. CJ 6813 is similar to the above described but has scattered cream flecks on a green dorsum.</p><p>Comparisons. Tadpoles of Gastrotheca litonedis may occur in sympatry with those of G. pseustes 2 and G. lojana . Gastrotheca litonedis differs from them by having less pigmentation on dorsum and venter (compare in Fig. 5). It further differs from G. lojana by having a lowest tail dorsal fin.and from G. pseustes by lacking a reticulated pattern on the flanks.</p><p>Vocalization. A total of nine individuals of Gastrotheca litonedis were recorded from two locations (6 individuals from San Gerardo and 3 from San Fernando, Laguna de Busa) in Azuay Province (Appendix III). Descriptive statistics of the acoustic variables are provided in Table 5. The advertisement call of G. litonedis is a simple call, composed of a series of short, single-pulsed notes, emitted at regular intervals (Fig. 8 E–H). In our recordings, the calls have between 1 and 21 notes per call. The notes have a mean duration of 0.075 s (SD = 0.025) and a mean inter-note interval of 1.768 s (SD = 0.286). The mean dominant frequency of the call is 1224.0 Hz (SD = 66.415), with mean 90% bandwidth of 1114.7–1308.1 Hz. The fundamental frequency and harmonics are not clearly recognizable.</p><p>Comparisons. The advertisement call of Gastrotheca litonedis is similar to that of G. cuencana; all the other species of Gastrotheca species in the southern Ecuadorian Andes have complex calls. However, the call of G. litonedis has a higher note rate, longer note duration, shorter inter-note interval, higher dominant frequency, and higher 90% bandwidth frequency compared with G. cuencana (Table 5).</p><p>Distribution and ecology. Gastrotheca litonedis is known from three localities (ca. Girón, San Fernando (Laguna de Busa), San Gerardo) on the eastern slope of the Cordillera Occidental in Azuay Province (Fig. 9). Its elevational range is 2750–2854 m in an area of extent of occurrence of about 10.2 km 2. This nocturnal, semiarboreal species inhabits forest and disturbed areas in the Evergreen Montane Forest of Cordillera Occidental of the Andes (Ministerio de Ambiente del Ecuador 2012), where the average annual rainfall is 611–658 mm and the average annual temperature is 12.2–12.5 °C (Fick &amp; Hijmans 2017). Most of the specimens collected at Laguna de Busa were found among totora reeds ( Schoenoplectus californicus) at the border of the lagoon. Males were calling from totora reeds at approximately 1–2 m above ground. Females were perched on totora reeds approximately 40 cm above ground and along small streams that were close to the lagoon. Some males also were calling from branches of shrubs around the lagoon approximately 2.5 m above ground. During the day a male and a female were basking on leaves of calla lilies ( Zantedeschia aethiopica), which were present along irrigation ditches, bordering pastures. At this locality, Gastrotheca litonedis is syntopic with G. pseustes (sensu lato) and G. lojana; all of them have a biphasic mode of development, in which brooding females release tadpoles in ponds, where they complete their development (Figs. 10–11). In all the visits made to this locality (October 2007 and December 2007, August 2008, June 2011), gravid females were found, as well as tadpoles in small streams, temporary ponds, and at the edge of the lagoon. One of the gravid females collected on 9 June 2011 was transported to the laboratory, where it deposited 96 tadpoles. At San Gerardo, most individuals were found on the border of an irrigation ditch in a pasture. Males were calling from the grass at approximately 50 cm above ground. At this locality, G. pseustes (sensu lato) also was found. A brooding female of G. litonedis, showing heliophilic behavior during most of the incubation time, under captive conditions in an outdoor enclosure, is depicted in Figure 10C.</p><p>Conservation status. IUCN categorizes Gastrotheca litonedis as Endangered (Coloma et al. 2004). However, the current assessment was based on information combining the two species described in this study ( G. litonedis and G. cuencana). Thus, we re-categorize this species as Critically Endangered, according with IUCN criteria and sub-criteria B1ab(i,ii,iii,iv). Currently, the known area of occurrence of G. litonedis is extremely small (10.2 km 2), and its area of occupancy is even smaller; although we suspect that its distribution might increase as further searches are conducted. Its populations are in heavily human populated areas. For example, the surroundings of Laguna de Busa have been deforested and modified for human activities (Fig. 11D). The lake contains two introduced, predatory fish (trout and carp) and its surroundings are greatly altered by the introduction of exotic eucalyptus and conifers. Additional threats at this site are unregulated tourisms activities.</p><p>Comments. In the original description of Gastrotheca litonedis, Duellman and Hillis (1987) included data on nine males and 15 females. As noted by Duellman (2015), of these specimens, only the holotype, KU 202690, is G. litonedis . The other specimens used by Duellman &amp; Hillis (1987) are identified herein as G. cuencana . In addition, the photograph published as the holotype of G. litonedis by Duellman and Hillis (1987:156: Fig. 9) is not the holotype. The frog in the photograph is actually G. lojana (KU 148794, from 2 km SSW of Saraguro, Loja Province, Ecuador). Also, the frog QCAZ 2692 depicted in Duellman (2015: Fig. 11.12B) is G. lojana (not G. litonedis). Genetic sequences generated in this study from tissues of the holotype differ from the sequences of other specimens generated and published by Wiens et al. (2007) (Genbank numbers: DQ679395, DQ679355, DQ679323, DQ679287), which are more similar to sequences of G. cuencana .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B02D63EFF2173C2F134F837	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
DF65A94B0B78D632FF2170A8F070FD7C.text	DF65A94B0B78D632FF2170A8F070FD7C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca lojana Parker 1932	<div><p>Gastrotheca lojana Parker 1932</p><p>Gastrotheca marsupiata lojana Parker, 1932:25 .— Holotype: BM 1947.2.31.13 (Fig. 25B) from Loja, Loja Province, Ecuador. Gastrotheca monticola (part)— Duellman &amp; Hillis 1987:158.</p><p>Gastrotheca (Duellmania) lojana — Dubois, 1987:33.</p><p>Referred specimens. Ecuador: Azuay: CJ 390, 401–2, from Oña, 2272 m (03° 27' 41.04" S, 79° 09' 46.47" W), on 15 June 2011 by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara and Henry Grefa; KU 138401–3, from Girón, 2310 m (03° 10' 00.12" S, 79° 07' 59.88" W), on 0 6 June 1970 by Thomas A. Fritts; QCAZ 2692, from Oña, 2272 m (03° 27' 41.04" S, 79° 09' 46.47" W), on 1 December 1999 by Luis A. Coloma and Luis E. López; QCAZ 26314–5, 26318, 26322–3, 26327–8, 26334–5, 26337–8, from Oña, 2272 m (03° 27' 40.43" S, 79° 09' 45.11" W), on 8 August 2003 by Luis A. Coloma and Ítalo G. Tapia, QCAZ 31521–3, from Oña, 2272 m (03° 27' 41.04" S, 79° 09' 46.47" W), on 27 December 2005 by Ítalo G. Tapia and Giovanni Onore; QCAZ 32212, from Oña, 2272 m (03° 27' 41.04" S, 79° 09' 46.47" W), on 2006 by Luis A. Coloma; QCAZ 32571, from Oña, 2272 m (03° 27' 40.43" S, 79° 09' 45.11" W), on 8 August 2003 by Luis A. Coloma, Erik R. Wild, Andrés Merino-Viteri, Ítalo G. Tapia and Edwin Patricio Vargas; QCAZ 42725, from San Fernando, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.26362&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.154389" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.26362/lat -3.154389)">Laguna de Busa</a>, 2834 m (03° 09' 15.80" S, 79° 15' 49.03" W), on 22 October 2007 by Sofía Carvajal-Endara, Amaranta Carvajal-Campos, Andrea Carvajal Endara . Loja: BM 1947.2.31.6–10, BM 1947.2.31.13–18, from Loja, 2150 m (04° 00' 00" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 1930–1 by Clodoveo Carrión Mora. KU 120673 –4, from Loja, 2150 m (04° 00' 00" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 9 June 1968 by John D, Lynch; KU 120675, from 2 km E Loja, 2100 m (03° 59' 56.4" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 9 June 1968 by John D, Lynch, KU 138233, from 3 km W Loja, 2150 m (03° 58' 47.99" S, 79° 12' 54" W), on 21 June 1970 by Thomas H. Fritts; KU 138234, from 10 km W Loja, 2500 m (03° 59' 56.4" S, 70° 14' 43.08" W), on 27 June 1970 by Thomas H. Fritts; KU 138235–6, from 5 km N Loja, 2150 m (03° 52' 00.12" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 28 June 1970 by Thomas H. Fritts; KU 138404–9, from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.2167&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.6116" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.2167/lat -3.6116)">Saraguro</a>, 2412 m (03° 36' 00" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 19–20 June 1970 by Thomas H. Fritts; KU 148568, from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.2167&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.6116" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.2167/lat -3.6116)">Saraguro</a>, 2412 m (03° 36' 00" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 22 May 1971 by Richard M. Montanucci; KU 178482–95, from 2 km SSW Saraguro, 2569 m (03° 38' 22.92" S, 79° 13' 59.87" W), on 5 January 1978 by John D. Lynch; KU 178496–7, from 2.1 km N Saraguro, 2575 m (03° 36' 41.76" S, 79° 13' 00.12" W), on 7 January 1978 by John D. Lynch; QCAZ 22371, from Loja Zamora Huayco, 3018 m (04° 05' 49.9806" S, 79° 10' 02.499" W), on 12 December 2002 by Diego Almeida-Reinoso; QCAZ 30788, from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.24&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.6397192" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.24/lat -3.6397192)">Saraguro</a>, 2412 m (03° 36' 00" S, 79° 13' 00.01" W), on 20 September 1978 by MC; QCAZ 34505, from 2 km SW Saraguro, 2569 m (03° 38' 22.99" S, 79° 14' 24" W), on 5 January 1978 by John D. Lynch . El Oro: QCAZ 32724, from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=-79.4899&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=-3.4551196" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long -79.4899/lat -3.4551196)">Guanazán</a>, 2984 m (03° 27' 18.43" S, 79° 29' 23.64" W), on 3 December 2006 by Silvia Aldás Alarcón .</p><p>Diagnosis. Included in the genus Gastrotheca by having a closed brood pouch on dorsum of female. A moderately large species (54.1–76.1 mm SVL in females, n = 12; 40.2–61.0 mm SVL in males; n = 24) with tibia length 41¯56% SVL, longer than foot; (2) interorbital distance about 1.6 times width of upper eyelid; (3) skin on dorsum finely granular, not co-ossified with skull, lacking transverse ridges; (4) supraciliary processes absent; (5) heel lacking calcar or tubercle; (6) tympanic annulus distinct, smooth; (7) Fingers I and II about equal in length, discs on fingers about twice width of digits proximal to discs; (8) fingers unwebbed; (9) webbing between external toes extending to the antepenultimate subarticular tubercle on Toe IV, to point midway between penultimate and distal subarticular tubercles on Toe V; (10) in life, dorsum green, brown, or tan with dark paravertebral marks; (11) markings on the head consisting of pale labial stripe broader at the posterior half of lip and dark interorbital bar or two blotches connected or not to paravertebral marks; (12) pale cream or white dorsolateral stripe fragmented; (13) flanks dark brown, green or tan with pale cream spots ventrally, anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs, groin, and dorsal surface of foot with contrasting pattern of heavily white mottling on a dark background, with bluish or greenish tinges; dorsal surfaces of limbs with dark brown or green bars; (14) venter creamy white with dark brown dots or marks; (15) brood pouch single, dorsal.</p><p>Gastrotheca lojana most closely resembles three other species in southern Ecuador ( G. elicioi, G. cuencana, and G. litonedis) and one species in northern Peru ( G. monticola). Gastrotheca lojana differs from G. elicioi in some coloration patterns (described above; also, compare in Figs. 10L, 29, 30 vs 12–14). A black canthal stripe is absent in G. lojana, but present in G. elicioi . The anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs and groin are heavily mottled in G. lojana, but slightly mottled in G. elicioi . The interorbital mark in G. lojana is a transverse bar that sometimes is divided into two blotches and that is usually connected with two broad paravertebral marks. In G. elicioi dorsal marks, when present, consist of a triangular interorbital mark, which may or may not be connected to</p><p>two narrow and curved paravertebral marks. Gastrotheca lojana has a conspicuous, elevated row of dorsolateral warts, whereas it is barely raised in G. elicioi . In addition, in G. elicioi the dark bars on limbs, when present, are shorter and less defined than in G. lojana . Gastrotheca lojana differs from its most related species, G. cuencana and G. litonedis (compare Figs. 10L, 29, 30 vs 2–4, 26–27) by having: a cream venter with dark flecks or spots (uniform creamy white in G. cuencana and pale brownish gray in G. litonedis); an interorbital bar or blotches usually connected to paravertebral marks (absent in G. cuencana and G. litonedis); dorsal surfaces of limbs with dark transverse bars (irregular dark blotches in G. cuencana and usually unmarked in G. litonedis); anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs and groin heavily mottled (translucent cream without marks in G. cuencana and usually brown and slightly molted in some G. litonedis); dorsal surfaces of fingers cream or with dark brown spots (cream in G. cuencana and of same color of the rest of the body in G. litonedis); a fragmented dorsolateral stripe (continuous in G. cuencana and G. litonedis); and complex call (simple call in G. cuencana and G. litonedis). The genetic divergence between G. lojana and G. litonedis is 2.5% and between G. lojana and G. cuencana is 2.8% (in a DNA dataset of 438 bp, 16S gene). Gastrotheca lojana differs from G. monticola by having the concealed surfaces of thighs, groin and dorsal surfaces of the feet with white mottling on a dark background, whereas in G. monticola the axilla and groin, concealed surfaces of thighs, and dorsal surfaces of the feet are green with black spots on a green or tan background.</p><p>A distinctly different species, G. pseustes, occurs sympatrically with G. lojana in part of its range. Gastrotheca lojana differs from G. pseustes by having finely granular skin on the dorsum (smooth to coarsely granular in G. pseustes), larger digital discs, and pale dorsolateral and supracloacal stripes. Also the call of G. lojana can be easily distinguished form the call of G. pseustes by the amplitude modulation of the longer note, shorter call duration, higher short note rate, shorter interval between notes, fewer pulses, lower pulse rate, a much lower dominant frequency, and a lower 90% bandwidth frequency.</p><p>Variation. Morphometric variation of 12 females and 24 males is summarized in Table 3. Females are larger than males (61.6± 5.7 mm; 49.4± 4.5 mm). All adults have a moderate supratympanic fold, which usually extends from the superior part of tympanum to point just above the insertion of forelimb. The dorsolateral row of warts can be less conspicuous in some specimens. Each vomer has four to ten teeth (5.7±1.4, n = 44).</p><p>Color variation in preservative. In most preserved specimens the dorsum is bluish gray or brown with darker interorbital, paravertebral marks and bars on the limbs. Some specimens also have dark flecks densely distributed on dorsum. All specimens lack a dark canthal stripe and have a cream white supralabial stripe, which is broader at the posterior margin of the lip and that is extended from the posterior margin of the lip to the insertion of the forelimb. Most of the specimens have a dark brown stippling on the supralabial stripe. A fragmented supracloacal and heel stripes are present; also a white mark extends laterally from the vent. The flanks are dark gray with black and white dots; the posterior part of the flanks, groin, concealed surfaces of thighs and dorsal surface of foot are heavily mottled. The venter is white and varies from having a few dark flecks to having a heavily mottled pattern.</p><p>Color variation in life. (Figs. 10L, 29, 30). In living individuals the color of the dorsum is green (CJ 408), brown (CJ 405) or tan (CJ 407) with darker interorbital and paravertebral marks. The interorbital mark is usually a bar that connects the two eyelids; however, in some individuals it is divided into two blotches (CJ 411). Paravertebral marks are broad and are usually connected with the interorbital mark (CJ 407) or, in some individuals (CJ 405), they are fused at the level of the scapular region. The venter is white in most specimens, some have dark flecks and spots evenly distributed, and others have a heavily mottled pattern. On the head there is a cream supralabial stripe, which is broader at the posterior margin of the lip and extends from the posterior margin of the lip to the insertion of the forelimb. The tympanum is brown, tan or olive green. The iris is reddish bronze with a few black reticulations. The flanks are brown, tan, or green with black and white spots. The posterior part of the flanks, groin, anterior and posterior surfaces of thighs have a heavily mottled pattern, some individuals have green or purple tinge on the groin and posterior surface of the thighs (Fig. 30). Supracloacal and heel stripes are cream or tan. The ventral surfaces of the shanks have a faint tinge of pale blue.</p><p>Tadpoles. Tadpoles belong to Type IV tadpole of Orton (1953), and the exotroph, benthic ecomorphological guild. All measurements are expressed in millimeters. The following description is based on a specimen in Stage 36, from a series (CJ 1948) obtained from a pond at Oña, 2272 m, Azuay Province, Ecuador, by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara, and Henry Grefa on 15 June 2011 (Fig. 5C). Total length 55.7; body length 19.8 (36% of total length). Body ovoid in dorsal and lateral views, slightly depressed; throat shape concave in lateral profile; body width at the level of spiracle 12.3, and height at same position10.2; head width at level of eyes 10.5. Lateralline system barely visible, supraorbital and infraorbital lines both originating at tip of snout, running in parallel to the eye and making contact immediately behind the eye; angular line descending vertically from just posterior of eye to throat; anterior oral line descending vertically from level of oral disc and just anterior to level of nares to throat there it curve to parallel infraorbital line, thereby forming a continuous circuit with angular and loreal lines; dorsal body and middle body lines present.</p><p>Nostril medium sized (in proportion to body length), ovoid, protruding, with a fleshy annulus, its opening directed anterolaterally. Snout–nostril distance 2.8; internarial distance 3.2. Eye positioned and directed dorsally, not visible from below; eye length 2.1, eye width 1.9; interorbital distance 5.7. Spiracle sinistral, located ventrolaterally; spiracular opening directed posteriorly; distance from tip of snout to spiracular opening 13.7; spiracle end rounded, attached to body wall, inner wall of spiracle not evident; tube length 4.0, tube transverse width 2.9. Vent tube dextral, its opening directed posteriorly, tube length 3.7, tube transverse width 2.1. Tail length 37.0, caudal musculature slender, narrowing gradually until tail terminus; caudal muscle height 5.2, caudal muscle width 4.3; caudal fins well developed and about the same size, originating near tail-body junction; maximum height of tail 13.6; tail terminus rounded, caudal musculature not reaching fin terminus.</p><p>Oral disc small, ventral, located near tip of snout, not protruding laterally beyond body, not visible dorsally; transverse width 4.1. It is surrounded by a uniserial row of short, marginal papillae, interrupted medially on upper lip; lower lip papillae alternating in and out, giving the appearance of two series; upper lip with 21 papillae on right side and 19 papillae on left side; lower lip with 63 marginal papillae; upper jaw sheath medium-sized, forming a finely serrated, smooth arch, height 0.4, transverse width 3.0 (48% of oral disc width); lower jaw sheath V- shaped, open and finely serrated, width 2.1, height 0.7. Labial tooth row formula 2/3(1), tooth rows lengths: A1: 4.2, A2: 4.1, P1 right row 1.9, P1 left row 1.6, P1 gap 0.3, P2: 3.2, P3: 3.5. (Fig. 6C).</p><p>Color in preservative. Dorsum dull gray, with paler (translucent) areas on the flanks and snout. Caudal muscles pale gray with small cream flecks; dorsal and ventral fins translucent with evenly distributed cream flecks, except at tip where flecks are absent. Venter translucent on throat and belly regions, guts not exposed, white pigment partially covers the belly, producing a black and white mottling; eyes lavender gray with white flecks; oral apparatus translucent.</p><p>Color in life. In dorsal and lateral views, body olive-cream; loreal and snout areas palest. Ventrally, guts not visible, belly white with gray marks; gills visible through the throat, with a reddish hue. Caudal musculature cream-gray; proximal third reddish with myomeres and medial line well defined; distal two thirds with small cream flecks; dorsal and ventral fins translucent, suffused with minute cream flecks, clustering in rounded patches near borders of fins; most dense near tail-body junction. Spiracle, oral apparatus, and legs olive-cream. Iris gold.</p><p>Variation. Variation of 28 meristic characters of tadpoles in Stages 34–41 (CJ 1948) are shown in Table 9. Total length varies between 40.9 (Stage 34) and 61.2 (Stage 41) and tail length proportion varies from 59.1 to 63.7 until stage 41; labial tooth row formula 2/3(1). Number of marginal papillae varies among specimens and Gosner stages, variation in number of ventral papillae at lower lip is moderate (60 and 69). The color of venter varies from nearly plain gray (CJ 4303) (Fig. 31) to gray flecks in a white background (CJ 1948) (Fig. 5C). Duellman (2015) described a tadpole (KU 203548) from 7.9 Km W Loja. Nonetheless, it may also belong to either G. pseustes, G. psychrophila, or G. turnerorum .</p><p>We documented changes during ontogenetic development of CJ 4303, 4304 (Figs. 31 A–C, 32). At Stage 46, the dorsum is nearly uniform clear brown; the paraverterbal marks and interorbital marks are green and vary from nearly absent to well defined.</p><p>Comparisons. Tadpoles of Gastrotheca lojana may occur in sympatry with those of G. elicioi, G. psychrophila (tadpole unknown, see Remarks under G. elicioi tadpole account), G. pseustes 1, and G. turnerorum in the Loja- Abra de Zamora region, with G. litonedis and G. pseustes 2 (tadpole not described), in the Laguna de Busa area and with at least G. pseustes in other localities (compare in Fig. 5). Gastrotheca lojana differs from G. elicioi by lacking a dorsal gray-pigmented fin that abruptly arises from the body, from G. pseustes 1 by lacking a reticulated pattern on flanks, from G. turnerorum by having a more pointed tail terminus and lacking bold cream marks in a dorsal line of caudal musculature, and from G. litonedis by having a highest tail dorsal fin.</p><p>Vocalization. Five individuals of Gastrotheca lojana were recorded from one location in Azuay Province (one individual from San Fernando, Laguna de Busa) and from one location in Loja Province (four individuals from Oña) (Appendix III). The advertisement call of G. lojana is a complex call, composed of one long pulsed note and followed (or not) by one or two short, single-pulsed notes (Fig. 17 H–N). The long note had a mean duration of 0.562 s (SD = 0.125) and consisted on average of 17.59 (SD = 2.418) distinct pulses (pulse series), separated by silent intervals (amplitude modulation of 100%). The amplitude of the long note increases gradually towards the end, without falling. The short notes have a mean duration of 0.064 s (SD = 0.027) and the inter-note interval is on average of 0.356 s (SD = 0.107). The mean dominant frequency is 1118.1 Hz (SD = 126.872), with a mean 90% bandwidth of 986.1–1348.4 Hz. The fundamental frequency is not clearly recognizable; when visible, 5 to 7 harmonics are distinguishable in the short notes.</p><p>Comparisons. The advertisement call of Gastrotheca lojana is most similar to that of G. testudinea, but G. lojana has a shorter call duration, higher short note rate, shorter long notes, short notes duration, shorter inter-note intervals, higher pulse rate, a higher dominant frequency and a higher 90% bandwidth frequency compared with the call of G. testudinea (Table 5). The call of G. lojana can be easily distinguished form the calls of G. yacuri and G. pseustes by the amplitude modulation of the longer note, shorter call duration, higher short note rate, shorter inter-note interval, smaller number of pulses, lower pulse rate, a much lower dominant frequency, and a lower 90% bandwidth frequency. Also, G. lojana emits only one long note, whereas G. yacuri emits up to three (usually 2) long notes per call and G. pseustes emits a larger number of long and short notes (Table 5).</p><p>Distribution and ecology. Gastrotheca lojana is known in basins within Azuay, Loja, and El Oro Provinces. Its elevational range is 1682–3018 m in an area of extent of occurrence of about 1621.2 km 2.</p><p>This nocturnal, semiarboreal species inhabits mostly disturbed areas and a few forests in the Evergreen Montane Shrub in the south of the Ecuadorian Andes, the Evergreen Montane Forest of the Cordillera Occidental of the Andes, and the Evergreen Montane Forest from the south of the Cordillera Oriental of the Andes (Ministerio de Ambiente del Ecuador 2012), where the average annual rainfall is 566–1066 mm and the average annual temperature is 12.2–18.8 °C (Fick &amp; Hijmans 2017). At Oña, Azuay Province, several Gastrotheca lojana were calling from agave leafs 50–130 cm above the ground and among grasses near the ground (LAC field notes, 8 August 2003). A male from San Fernando, Azuay Province, was calling from approximately 100 cm above the ground on a large stone. It was close to another adult and a juvenile of the same species; the stone was 7 m from a pond. Another individual was among totora reeds ( Schoenoplectus californicus) approximately 8 cm above a small stream. A brooding female is depicted in Figure 10L. Throughout most of its distribution, G. lojana is syntopic with G. pseustes; at San Fernando, it is syntopic with G. pseustes and G. litonedis, and in the southern part of its range it is also syntopic with G. elicioi .</p><p>Conservation status. We suggest that Gastrotheca lojana should be considered as Endangered according to criteria B1ab(iii,v) of the IUCN Red List. We suggest this category because its small area of occurrence (1621 km 2) is fragmented, and its habitats are in heavily human populated areas. Several search efforts (in 2010–2013, 2016, 2017) at Loja and surroundings revealed no specimens. Environs of Laguna de Busa and Oña have been deforested and modified for human activities (8D, E). The Busa lake is populated by introduced fish (trout and carp) and its surroundings by introduced eucalyptus and conifers. Additional threats at Laguna de Busa are unregulated tourism activities. None of its populations is included in the National System of Protected Areas (SNAP).</p><p>Comments. Duellman (1974) referred some specimens from 10 km W Loja, (KU 142603–8, 148549–51), Loja Province, to Gastrotheca lojana . These are identified here as G. elicioi (see below). Also we identify as G. lojana specimens from Girón, Azuay Province (KU 138401–138403), and Saraguro, Loja Province (KU 138404– 138409) that Duellman (1974) referred to G. monticola . In Duellman &amp; Hillis (1987), specimens of G. lojana were also included in the description of G. monticola . Loaiza-S (2012) provided a summary account of G. monticola, in which G. lojana was included. Duellman et al. (2014) and (Duellman 2015) recognized G. lojana as genetically distinct from G. monticola . Duellman (2015) provided an account of G. lojana . A specimen from Oña, Azuay Province (QCAZ 2692) depicted as G. litonedis in Duellman (2015:239, Fig. 11.12 B) belongs to G. lojana .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B78D632FF2170A8F070FD7C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
DF65A94B0B70D628FF2172C1F079FCEE.text	DF65A94B0B70D628FF2172C1F079FCEE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Gastrotheca pseustes Duellman & Hillis 1987	<div><p>Gastrotheca pseustes Duellman &amp; Hillis 1987</p><p>Gastrotheca pseustes was described from 7.1 km by road north of San Lucas, 2940 m (03° 41' S, 79° 15' W), Loja Province, Ecuador, in the southern Andean Cordillera. The type locality is located about midway between San Lucas and Saraguro. Current assignment of specimens to this taxon is constrained because: (1) there is a high phenotypic similarity between G. pseustes and G. lateonota from the Cordillera de Huancabamba in Peru (compare both species in Fig. 10 with Duellman 2015: Fig. 12.21); (2). There is no genetic information for topotypic G. lateonota, thereby precluding comparisons with specimens from southern Ecuador; (3) according to Duellman (2015), variation in morphometrics, structural characters, and coloration within G. pseustes presents a geographic mosaic, except for the southernmost population, Saraguro. The frogs from Saraguro are somewhat more distinctive than the others in being larger in size, and in having broader heads and some consistent characteristics of color pattern, including dark flanks with pale spots and uniformly dark posterior surfaces of the thighs; and (4) new molecular phylogeographic data (not shown) suggest that there may be at least two species in what is now recognized as Gastrotheca pseustes .</p><p>While awaiting ongoing analyses of molecular data and a future report with a more detailed taxonomic and phylogeographic revision of Gastrotheca pseustes, we provide additional data of specimens (adults, tadpoles and metamorphs) from the type locality and surrounding areas in Loja and El Oro provinces.</p><p>The recognition of Gastrotheca lateonota in southern Ecuador (from El Oro and Loja provinces) by Blackburn &amp; Duellman (2013), Duellman et al. (2014), Yáñez-Muñoz et al. (2014), and Duellman (2015) was based on specimens identified as that species by Carvajal-Endara and Coloma. Subsequent examination of the specimens from Chilla, El Oro Province, reveals that they do not differ from the holotype (KU 203443, Fig. 10G) and additional specimens (Figs. 10 D–F) of G. pseustes, from 3.7 km S Saraguro, 2800 m. Thus, we do not recognize G. lateonota to occur in Ecuador, and treat the specimens from Chilla as part of a series of populations we consider G. pseustes complex ( G. pseustes 1, G. pseustes 2, Fig. 33), occurring from the Equator south to high elevations of Podocarpus National Park in southern Ecuador (see also map in Duellman 2015: Figure 12.47). Conceivably, molecular data from topotypic G. lateonota from 31.5 km [by road] E Canchaque, 2770 m, Cordillera de Huancabamba, Región de Piura, Peru, (Fig. 33), and additional populations from northern Peru would resolve by (1) placement of non-type populations in either G. pseustes or G. lateonota, or (2) placement of G. lateonota as a junior synonym of G. pseustes .</p><p>Castroviejo-Fisher et al. (2015) included in a phylogenetic analysis a specimen UINHM 94580 from San Rafael, Azuay, Ecuador under the name Gastrotheca riobambae, a species that does not occur in southern Ecuador. Their analysis places it in the G. pseustes complex. We also found a locality named San Rafael in Azuay Province, which is located between Cuenca and Cumbe, in Parroquia Tarqui at about 2700 m asl (not in the lowlands as was stated by Castroviejo-Fisher et al., 2015). This locality is well within the altitudinal and latitudinal range of G. pseustes 2.</p><p>Herein, we provide meristic data from specimens of Gastrotheca pseustes 1 and 2 (Table 3), images depicting intrapopulation color pattern variation of metamorphs (Fig. 34), of adults of G. pseustes 1 from the type locality (Fig. 10G) and from Chillacocha (Figs. 10 D–F). Data for additional specimens of G. pseustes 1 are: QCAZ 45121, 45124 – 5, adult males, and QCAZ 45123 adult female from Chillacocha, ~ 8 km SW Chilla, El Oro Province (03° 30' 39.1" S, 79° 36' 52.92" W; 3163 m) collected on 18 August 2009. The frogs were on leaves of Gunnera sp. ( Gunneraceae) near a small stream and adjoining marshland about 10 x 5 m. The water temperature was 9.6° C. Two individuals—CJ 201 adult female and KU 335386 adult male—are from Chillacocha, ~ 8 km SW Chilla, El Oro Province (03° 30' 15.37" S, 79° 37' 01.7" W; 3250 m) collected on 10 June 2011. They were in amplexus on a leaf of Gunnera sp. ( Gunneraceae) approximately 90 cm above the ground and a small stream. Tadpoles were collected from a puddle next to the road in the vicinity of Chilla, El Oro Province (03° 27' 29.41" S, 79° 34' 52.07" W; 2452 m) on 11 June 2011; one of these was raised to be an adult male (CJ 399). Tadpoles were collected from a puddle next to the road at Manu, Loja Province (03° 33' 17.03" S, 79° 22' 6.02" W; 2876 m) on 11 June 2011; one of these was raised to be an adult female (CJ 400). Tadpoles were collected from the entrance of Parque Nacional Podocarpus, Loja Province (04° 05' 25.51" S, 79° 12' 09.97" W; 2456 m) on 14 June 2011; one of these was raised to be an adult female (KU 335387).</p><p>Tadpoles. Tadpoles belong to Type IV tadpole of Orton (1953), and the exotroph, benthic ecomorphological guild. All measurements are expressed in millimeters. The following description is based on a specimen in Stage 36, from a series (CJ 1949) obtained from a pond at Chillacocha, 8 km SW Chilla, 3250 m, El Oro Province, Ecuador, by Elicio E. Tapia, Sofía Carvajal-Endara, and Henry Grefa on 10 June 2011 (Fig. 5E). Total length 58.2; body length 22.7 (39% of total length). Body ovoid in dorsal and lateral views, slightly depressed; throat concave in lateral profile, sloping from anterior margin of snout to belly; body width at level of spiracle 15.3, and height at same position 12.9; head width at level of eyes 11.7. Lateral-line system present but barely visible, supraorbital and infraorbital lines both originating at tip of snout, running parallel to the eye and making contact immediately behind the eye; angular line descending vertically from just posterior of eye to throat; it dorsally contacts with post infraorbital line; post-supraocular present in form of a few stitches, anterior oral line descending vertically from oral disc level and behind nares level to throat, making a curve that parallels infraorbital line, forming a circuit continuous with angular and loreal lines; ventral line surrounds dorsally the spiracle; dorsal body and middle body lines not visible. Nostril medium sized (in proportion to body length), ovoid, protruding, with a fleshy annulus, its opening directed anterolaterally. Snout–nostril distance 3.9; internarial distance 3.6. Eye positioned and directed dorsolaterally, eye length 2.9, eye width 2.3; interorbital distance 7.1. Spiracle sinistral, located at midbody, spiracular opening oriented posteriorly; distance from tip of snout to spiracular opening 15.6; end of spiracle rounded, attached to body wall, inner wall of spiracle not evident; tube length 2.7, tube transverse width 3.0. Vent tube dextral, opening directed posteriorly, tube length 2.9, tube transverse width 2.8. Tail length 35.0, caudal musculature robust, narrowing gradually until tail terminus; caudal muscle height 4.5, caudal muscle width 4.3; caudal fins well developed and proportional, dorsal fin originating near tail-body junction, forming low hump; dorsal fin height 4.2, ventral fin height 3.8; maximum height of tail 12.3; tail terminus rounded, caudal musculature not reaching fin terminus.</p><p>Oral disc small, ventral, anteriorly reaching level of tip of snout, not protruding laterally beyond body, not visible dorsally; transverse width 5.9, surrounded by an uniserial row of small, marginal papillae, interrupted medially in upper lip; lower lip papillae alternating in orientation in and out, giving appearance of two rows; upper lip with 17 papillae on right side and 16 papillae on left side; lower lip with 52 marginal papillae; upper jaw sheath medium-sized, forming a finely serrated, smooth arch, with lateral processes, height 0.56, transverse width 3.7 (63% of oral disc width); lower jaw sheath V- shaped, finely serrated, width 2.9, height 0.68. Labial tooth row formula 2/3(1), tooth rows lengths: A1: 4.2, A2: 4.5, P1 right row 1.9, P1 left row 2.0, P1 gap 0.3, P2: 4.1, P3: 3.7. (Fig. 6F).</p><p>Color in preservative. Dorsum gray with darker gray areas on flanks, above eye and on throat; margin of snout paler than adjacent areas. Caudal musculature and fins with a profusion of medium-sized dots that are most dense on upper part of the musculature; fins otherwise translucent. Venter cream, speckled with white, guts not exposed; eyes lavender gray with irregular white markings, oral apparatus translucent.</p><p>Color in life. In dorsal view, body tan with black flecks. Flanks reticulated with black and tan; areas around the eyes and snout paler tan. Venter cream with black markings; throat translucent with small cream flecks; reddish gills evident. Caudal muscles reddish-pink, more evident on proximal half; myomeres barely visible; caudal muscles and fins having medium-sized cream dots, most dense on upper side of caudal muscles and near tail-body junction, forming a nearly conitnuous stripe along dorsolateral caudal musculature; otherwise caudal fins translucent. Legs cream with black markings on toes. Oral apparatus pale cream. Iris copper-yellow, with black reticulations.</p><p>......continued on the next page</p><p>Variation. Variation of 28 meristic characters of tadpoles in Stages 36–42 (CJ 1949) are shown in Table 10. Total length varies between 55.0 (Stage 40) and 58.2 (Stage 36) and tail length proportion varies from 60% to 70% until Stage 42. Number of marginal papillae varies among specimens and Gosner stages; number of lower lip papillae is high (43–52).</p><p>We documented changes in coloration during ontogenetic development of one, mostly pale brown individual (CJ 1953) (Figs. 5E, 35). At Stage 41, the dorsum and flanks are yellowish-brown with a poorly defined pattern of brown-gray, elongated paravertebral marks and few blotches on dorsum of hind limbs. A diffuse brown-gray stripe borders the canthal and dorsolateral body, and is bordered above by a creamy-brown stripe. The iris has a reddishgold suffusion. By Stage 45, markings on the dorsum and flanks are better defined with brown markings darkest peripherally; scattered green ill-defined flecks are present on dorsum of head, limbs, and canthus rostralis; tip of fingers are yellowish-cream. At Stage 46, paravertebral green-brown markings on dorsum of body and green flecks on limbs are contrasting to surrounding light brown areas; flanks have a dark brown stripe. Color variation in 6 metamorphs (CJ 1949, 1953–56, QCAZ 45126) in Stage 46 is depicted in Figure 34. They vary from dark brown to green with either well-defined paravertebral marks to a uniformly colored dorsum.</p><p>Comparisons. Tadpoles of Gastrotheca pseustes sensu stricto (in Loja and El Oro provinces) occur in sympatry with those of G. elicioi in the Saraguro region and with G. elicioi, G. lojana, G. psychrophila, and G. turnerorum in the Loja-Abra de Zamora region. Gastrotheca pseustes differs from G. elicioi by lacking a dorsal gray-pigmented fin that abruptly arises from the body; from G. lojana by having a reticulated pattern on flanks, and from G. turnerorum by having a less rounded tail terminus (compare in Fig. 5). For G. psychrophila, see remarks under G. elicioi tadpole account.</p><p>Vocalization. Four individuals of Gastrotheca pseustes were recorded from three locations in Loja Province (2 individuals from Bosque Washapamba, one from Vía Urdaneta-Tutupali, and 1 from Cerro de Arcos; see Appendix III). Because of the taxonomic problems related to the G. pseuste s complex we decided to use for the present analysis only the recordings obtained from populations situated nearby the type locality, south of the Jubones- Girón river valley in Loja Province (e.g. G. pseustes 1). Descriptive statistics of the acoustic variables are provided in Table 5. The advertisement call of G. pseustes is a complex call, composed of one to five long pulsed notes and followed (or not) by one to six short, single-pulsed notes (Fig. 23 H–N). The long note had a mean duration of 0.878 s (SD = 0.188) and consisted on average of 32.72 (SD = 6.867) distinct pulses, partly fused, without silent intervals (amplitude modulation close but less than 100%). The amplitude of the long note increases gradually towards the end of the note after which it decreases a little by the end. The short notes had a mean duration of 0.080 s (SD = 0.046) and the inter-note interval is on average of 0.795 s (SD = 0.502). The mean dominant frequency of the call is 1359.0 Hz (SD = 37.981), with a mean 90% bandwidth of 1043.2–1483.4 Hz. The fundamental frequency is usually recognizable; when visible, 6 to 7 harmonics are distinguishable.</p><p>Comparisons: The advertisement call of Gastrotheca pseustes is most similar to that of G. yacuri, but G. pseustes has a much longer call duration, longer long notes duration, longer inter-note interval a lower dominant frequency and a lower 90% bandwidth frequency compared with the call of G. yacuri (Table 5). Also, G. pseustes usually emits 4–6 short notes compared with the only two short notes that G. yacuri emits. The call of G. pseustes can be easily distinguished from that of G. lojana and G. testudinea by the amplitude modulation of the longer note, much longer call duration, lower short note rate, longer long notes duration, longer inter-note interval, larger number of pulses, higher pulse rate, a higher dominant frequency, and higher 90% bandwidth frequency. Also, G. pseustes emits a larger number of long and short notes compared with G. lojana and G. testudinea (Table 5).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DF65A94B0B70D628FF2172C1F079FCEE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía;Coloma, Luis A.;Morales-Mite, Manuel A.;Guayasamin, Juan M.;Székely, Paul;Duellman, William E.	Carvajal-Endara, Sofía, Coloma, Luis A., Morales-Mite, Manuel A., Guayasamin, Juan M., Székely, Paul, Duellman, William E. (2019): Phylogenetic systematics, ecology, and conservation of marsupial frogs (Anura: Hemiphractidae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador, with descriptions of four new biphasic species. Zootaxa 4562 (1): 1-102, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4562.1.1
