Nasutibatrachus Richards, Mahony & Donnellan, 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

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B387A6-221B-FFA3-9FE7-FE18FBFA54AD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nasutibatrachus Richards, Mahony & Donnellan
status

gen. nov.

Nasutibatrachus Richards, Mahony & Donnellan , gen. nov.

( Fig. 23)

ZooBank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:7DF4855C-6953-4D04-B969-C15F8D8B2013 Type species: Litoria mucro ( Menzies, 1993) .

Content: Five species— Nasutibatrachus mareku ( Günther, 2008) comb. nov., Nasutibatrachus mucro * ( Menzies, 1993) comb. nov., Nasutibatrachus pinocchio (Oliver et al., 2019) comb. nov., Nasutibatrachus pronimius * ( Menzies, 1993) comb. nov.,

Nasutibatrachus vivissimia* ( Oliver, Richards & Donnellan, 2019) comb. nov.

Diagnosis: Nasutibatrachus can be diagnosed from members of the Drymomantis Sub-clade except Exochohyla and Teretistes , by the presence of a rostral spike. It can be diagnosed from Exochohyla by the absence of the rostral spike in females vs. presence in both genders, short vs. medium mean call duration; from Teretistes by reduced vs. no finger webbing and reduced vs. minimal toe webbing. Refer to Tables 1 and 2.

Distribution and ecology: New Guinea mainland, near sea level up to at least 2200 m a.s.l. Arboreal frogs that breed in ponds and ditches but eggs and tadpoles unknown. Males call from foliage adjacent to lentic waterbodies in forest.

Etymology: From the adjectival form of the Latin nasus (nose) and the Greek βάτΡαΧος (batrachos, frog), alluding to the rostral projection. As with other generic names based on batrachus, the gender is masculine.

Remarks: Menzies (2006) considered havina, mucro , and pronimia to belong to the Litoria (= Kallistobatrachus ) iris group. Description of the tadpole of K. pronimia by Menzies may refer to Teretistes havina . Genetic data are unavailable for Nasutibatrachus mareku and N. pinocchio but these are small, slender species in which the male has a rostral spike and Oliver et al. (2019) placed them in a phenetic group containing both N. mucro and N. pronimia .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Pelodryadidae

Loc

Nasutibatrachus Richards, Mahony & Donnellan

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
2025
Loc

Nasutibatrachus vivissimia* ( Oliver, Richards & Donnellan, 2019 )

* (Oliver, Richards & Donnellan 2019
2019
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF