Systematics of minute strabomantid frogs allocated to the genus Noblella (Amphibia: Anura) with description of a new genus, seven new species, and insights into historical biogeography

Jhael A. Ortega, Diego F. Cisneros-Heredia, Jeffrey D. Camper, Andrés Romero-Carvajal, Leonardo Negrete, Santiago R. Ron*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Noblella is a genus of 17 recognized nominal species of ground-dwelling, direct-developing frogs. It consists of two clades that do not form a monophyletic group: a northern clade from northern Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Brazil and a southern clade from southern Peru and Bolivia. Herein, we present a systematic review of Noblella with emphasis on the northern clade, including a new phylogeny based on DNA sequences of mitochondrial and nuclear genes. We also describe the osteology of five species from the northern clade using X-ray computed tomography. Based on our results, we resurrect the genus Phyllonastes for species of the northern clade (i.e. eight described species plus six new species described herein) and restrict the genus Noblella to the southern clade. We describe a new genus of Holoadeninae, sister to Phyllonastes: Urkuphryne gen. nov., from northern Ecuador. The new genus is distinguished by unique morphological characteristics that are diagnostic of different genera in Strabomantidae. We describe seven new species diagnosable based on morphology. Phyllonastes has five morphological synapomorphies, including the absence of vomerine teeth. Phyllonastes originated in the Pacific basin, Chocó region, ∼21 Mya.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberzlae162
JournalZoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Volume203
Issue number1
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s).

Funding

Field and laboratory work in Ecuador were funded by Secretar\u00EDa Nacional de Educaci\u00F3n Superior, Ciencia, Tecnolog\u00EDa e Innovaci\u00F3n del Ecuador SENESCYT (Arca de No\u00E9 initiative; SRR and Omar Torres principal investigators) and grants from Pontificia Universidad Cat\u00F3lica del Ecuador, Direcci\u00F3n General Acad\u00E9mica. Field and lab work by DFCH was supported by the Smithsonian Women\u2019s Committee, Smithsonian Institution (2002 Research Training Program, National Museum of Natural History), Secretar\u00EDa de Educaci\u00F3n Superior, Ciencia, Tecnolog\u00EDa e Innovaci\u00F3n (SENESCYT, Programa \u201CBecas de Excelencia\u201D), Universidad San Francisco de Quito, and \u201CProyecto Descubre Napo\u201D, an initiative of Universidad San Francisco de Quito in association with Wildlife Conservation Society and funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation as part of the project: WCS Consolidating Conservation of Critical Landscapes (mosaics) in the Andes.

FundersFunder number
Dirección General Académica
Universidad San Francisco de Quito
Pontifical Catholic University of Ecuador
DFCH
Universidad San Francisco de Quito in association with Wildlife Conservation Society
Secretaría Nacional de Educación Superior, Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación del Ecuador SENESCYT
Secretaría de Educación Superior, Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación
Smithsonian Women’s Committee, Smithsonian Institution
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

    Keywords

    • Andes
    • Chocó
    • Holoadeninae
    • biogeography
    • phylogeny
    • systematics
    • taxonomy

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