Leptobatrachus Richards, Donnellan & Mahony, 2025

Donnellan, Stephen C., Mahony, Michael J., Esquerré, Damien, Brennan, Ian G., Price, Luke C., Lemmon, Alan, Lemmon, Emily Moriarty, Günther, Rainer, Monis, Paul, Bertozzi, Terry, Keogh, J. Scott, Shea, Glenn M. & Richards, Stephen J., 2025, Phylogenomics informs a generic revision of the Australo-Papuan treefrogs (Anura: Pelodryadidae), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 204 : -

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaf015

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B403627-916C-4ED3-ACEE-436ED2CF89E6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17007747

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B387A6-2211-FFA9-9C21-F98EFA1A519B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptobatrachus Richards, Donnellan & Mahony
status

gen. nov.

Leptobatrachus Richards, Donnellan & Mahony , gen. nov.

( Fig. 19)

ZooBank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:E426591D-82ED-443F-B500-DF10DF135A0F Type species: Hyla impura Peters & Doria, 1878 .

Content: Five species— Leptobatrachus flavescens ( Kraus and Allison, 2004a) comb. nov., Leptobatrachus impurus * ( Peters & Doria, 1878) comb. nov., Leptobatrachus insularis * ( Richards and Oliver, 2023) comb.nov., Leptobatrachus luteus * ( Boulenger, 1887) comb. nov., Leptobatrachus thesaurensis * (Peters, 1877) comb. nov.

Diagnosis: Leptobatrachus can be diagnosed from Cyclorana and Megatestis by the multi-divided state of the m. palmaris longus vs. a reduced state, overall tadpole morphology Type 4 vs. Type 3, and further from Megatestis by long vs. medium legs; from Cyclorana by long vs. short or medium length legs, small vs. large inner metatarsal tubercles, and presence vs. absence (in 12 of 13 species of Cyclorana ) of intercalary structures. Refer to Tables 1 and 2.

Distribution and ecology: Arboreal frogs that are found in New Guinea and surrounding islands, Bismarck Archipelago, Solomon Islands. Leptobatrachus luteus is known to lay its eggs over tree hollows and bamboo stems (Zug and Fisher 2018; S. Richards, personal observations). Other species known or expected to lay eggs in small, slow-flowing streams or forest pools.

Etymology: From the Greek Λεπτός(leptos, slender) and βάτΡαΧος (batrachos, frog), in reference to the slender body form of the species. The gender is masculine.

Remarks: Leptobatrachus is the equivalent of the Litoria thesaurensis Group of Tyler and Davies (1978). Leptobatrachus luteus and L. thesaurensis are unusual in pelodryadids in that they have green pigmented bones that can be seen in life through the ventral skin. The bones of both L. flavescens and L. impurus lack the green coloration ( Kraus and Allison 2004a, Menzies 2006). Genetic data are not available for Litoria flavescens , but it was placed in the Litoria thesaurensis group in the original description ( Kraus and Allison 2004a) and in the Litoria thesaurensis complex by Menzies (2006).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Pelodryadidae

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