@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref30646,
author = {Rafael Filgueira Jorge and William Ernest Magnusson and Dayse Aparecida da Silva and ?rico Macedo Polo and Albertina Pimentel Lima},
title = {Urban growth threatens the lowland Amazonian Manaus harlequin frog which represents an evolutionarily significant unit within the genus Atelopus },
year = {2020},
keywords = {Central Amazon; environmental heterogeneity; extinction risk; habitat modification; Harlequin Frog.},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The Manaus harlequin frog is an evolutionarily significant clade within the Atelopus hoogmoedi species complex. Analyses of 16S and COI concatenated sequences support Atelopus from the Manaus region as an evolutionary significant unit, sister of all species of a Guiana Shield clade. A previous study showed that subtle changes in stream characteristics influence the Manaus harlequin frog occurrence and density variation at local-scale in a reserve on the outskirts of Manaus. As deforestation is approaching areas where Manaus harlequin frog occurs, we asked how site and landscape heterogeneity influence the geographic boundaries, occurrence patterns and density variation of the Manaus harlequin frog. We searched for the frog in 80 plots that measured 250 m by 4-m on banks of first- to third-order streams during the rainy seasons in 2012-2013 and 2016-2019. The plot distribution covered all likely areas of occurrence of the Manaus harlequin frog and extended to the area where it is substituted by its geographically closest relative on the Guiana Shield. Ecological drivers related to climate, flooding events and forest structure apparently restrict the Manaus harlequin frog to a patchy distribution in a narrow portion of the interfluve between the Negro and Uatuma Rivers. Densities of individuals varied in response to subtle changes in floodplain and stream characteristics. The Manaus harlequin frog is associated with a very specific habitat that is directly affected by the growth of Manaus, the largest city in the Amazon. We conclude that it is endangered and urgent actions are required for its conservation.}
}
Trees for Study 26036



Trees
ID | Tree Label | Tree Title | Tree Type | Tree Kind | Taxa | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tr124590 | TREE1 | Atelopus RFJ COI 16S | Single | Species Tree | View Taxa |
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