@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18693,
author = {Matthew P. Heinicke and William E. Duellman and Linda Trueb and D. Bruce Means and Ross D. MacCulloch and S. Blair Hedges},
title = {A new frog family (Anura: Terrarana) from South America and an expanded direct-developing clade revealed by molecular phylogeny.},
year = {2009},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Zootaxa},
volume = {},
number = {2211},
pages = {1--35},
abstract = {Three frogs found in cloud forests on two nearby mountains in Guiana were included in a molecular phylogeny of 17 nuclear and mitochondrial genes (10,739 aligned sites) that revealed that the closest relatives of these frogs are the Terrarana (Brachycephalidae, Craugastoridae, Eleutherodactylidae, and Strabomantidae) and the next-closest relatives are hemiphractid frogs. We place these frogs in a new family, genus, and species, which is strongly supported as the basal clade within Terrarana: Ceuthomantidae n. fam., Ceuthomantis smaragdinus n. gen, n. sp. Morphological evidence supports the placement of two other species from the Guiana Highlands, Pristimantis aracamuni (Barrio-Amor?s & Molina) and P. cavernibardus (Myers & Donnelly), in the new family and genus. This close phylogenetic relationship of terraranans and marsupial frogs, nearly all of which have direct development, supports an hypothesis that direct development evolved early in the evolution of this huge clade (~1000 species), for which we propose the unranked taxonomic epithet Orthobatrachia.}
}
Citation for Study 10202
Citation title:
"A new frog family (Anura: Terrarana) from South America and an expanded direct-developing clade revealed by molecular phylogeny.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2547
(Status: Published).
Citation
Heinicke M., Duellman W., Trueb L., Means D., Macculloch R., & Hedges S. 2009. A new frog family (Anura: Terrarana) from South America and an expanded direct-developing clade revealed by molecular phylogeny. Zootaxa, null(2211): 1-35.
Authors
-
Heinicke M.
-
Duellman W.
-
Trueb L.
-
Means D.
-
Macculloch R.
-
Hedges S.
Abstract
Three frogs found in cloud forests on two nearby mountains in Guiana were included in a molecular phylogeny of 17 nuclear and mitochondrial genes (10,739 aligned sites) that revealed that the closest relatives of these frogs are the Terrarana (Brachycephalidae, Craugastoridae, Eleutherodactylidae, and Strabomantidae) and the next-closest relatives are hemiphractid frogs. We place these frogs in a new family, genus, and species, which is strongly supported as the basal clade within Terrarana: Ceuthomantidae n. fam., Ceuthomantis smaragdinus n. gen, n. sp. Morphological evidence supports the placement of two other species from the Guiana Highlands, Pristimantis aracamuni (Barrio-Amor?s & Molina) and P. cavernibardus (Myers & Donnelly), in the new family and genus. This close phylogenetic relationship of terraranans and marsupial frogs, nearly all of which have direct development, supports an hypothesis that direct development evolved early in the evolution of this huge clade (~1000 species), for which we propose the unranked taxonomic epithet Orthobatrachia.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10202
- Other versions:
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18693,
author = {Matthew P. Heinicke and William E. Duellman and Linda Trueb and D. Bruce Means and Ross D. MacCulloch and S. Blair Hedges},
title = {A new frog family (Anura: Terrarana) from South America and an expanded direct-developing clade revealed by molecular phylogeny.},
year = {2009},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Zootaxa},
volume = {},
number = {2211},
pages = {1--35},
abstract = {Three frogs found in cloud forests on two nearby mountains in Guiana were included in a molecular phylogeny of 17 nuclear and mitochondrial genes (10,739 aligned sites) that revealed that the closest relatives of these frogs are the Terrarana (Brachycephalidae, Craugastoridae, Eleutherodactylidae, and Strabomantidae) and the next-closest relatives are hemiphractid frogs. We place these frogs in a new family, genus, and species, which is strongly supported as the basal clade within Terrarana: Ceuthomantidae n. fam., Ceuthomantis smaragdinus n. gen, n. sp. Morphological evidence supports the placement of two other species from the Guiana Highlands, Pristimantis aracamuni (Barrio-Amor?s & Molina) and P. cavernibardus (Myers & Donnelly), in the new family and genus. This close phylogenetic relationship of terraranans and marsupial frogs, nearly all of which have direct development, supports an hypothesis that direct development evolved early in the evolution of this huge clade (~1000 species), for which we propose the unranked taxonomic epithet Orthobatrachia.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 18693
AU - Heinicke,Matthew P.
AU - Duellman,William E.
AU - Trueb,Linda
AU - Means,D. Bruce
AU - MacCulloch,Ross D.
AU - Hedges,S. Blair
T1 - A new frog family (Anura: Terrarana) from South America and an expanded direct-developing clade revealed by molecular phylogeny.
PY - 2009
UR -
N2 - Three frogs found in cloud forests on two nearby mountains in Guiana were included in a molecular phylogeny of 17 nuclear and mitochondrial genes (10,739 aligned sites) that revealed that the closest relatives of these frogs are the Terrarana (Brachycephalidae, Craugastoridae, Eleutherodactylidae, and Strabomantidae) and the next-closest relatives are hemiphractid frogs. We place these frogs in a new family, genus, and species, which is strongly supported as the basal clade within Terrarana: Ceuthomantidae n. fam., Ceuthomantis smaragdinus n. gen, n. sp. Morphological evidence supports the placement of two other species from the Guiana Highlands, Pristimantis aracamuni (Barrio-Amor?s & Molina) and P. cavernibardus (Myers & Donnelly), in the new family and genus. This close phylogenetic relationship of terraranans and marsupial frogs, nearly all of which have direct development, supports an hypothesis that direct development evolved early in the evolution of this huge clade (~1000 species), for which we propose the unranked taxonomic epithet Orthobatrachia.
L3 -
JF - Zootaxa
VL -
IS - 2211
SP - 1
EP - 35
ER -