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Browsing by Autor "Edgar Lehr"

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    A new species of Pristimantis (Amphibia, Anura, Strabomantidae) from the Pui Pui Protected Forest (central Peru), with comments on Pristimantis albertus Duellman & Hedges, 2007
    (Pensoft Publishers, 2020) Jiří Moravec; Edgar Lehr; Karel Kodejš
    We describe a new <i>Pristimantis</i> species from the eastern Andes, Región Junín, Peru following an integrative taxonomic approach. The description is based on three adult males (snout-vent length 25.7-28.8 mm) collected in two montane forests between 1615 and 1800 m a.s.l. in the Pui Pui Protected Forest and its close surroundings. The new species is mainly characterised by absence of tympanum, presence of inner tarsal fold, broad horizontal red band across iris, ventre mottled black and cream and ventral surfaces of thighs salmon and grey mottled. Amongst the Amazonian and montane forest <i>Pristimantis</i> that have the ventre and groin contrastingly black and cream mottled, <i>P. sinschi</i> <b>sp. nov.</b> is morphologically most similar to <i>P. lindae</i> and <i>P. ventrimarmoratus</i>. However, DNA barcoding revealed a clear distinction between these three species and placed <i>P. sinschi</i> <b>sp. nov.</b> as sister taxon of <i>P. lindae</i>. We designate a lectotype for <i>P. ventrimarmoratus</i> and restrict the type locality of this species to "El Topo, R. Pastaza, [Provincia Tungurahua,] E. Ecuador, 4200 feet". <i>Pristimantis albertus</i> and <i>P. sagittulus</i> are recorded for the first time in the Región Junín. Additional data on morphology and systematics are provided for <i>P. albertus</i>.
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    A Revision of Species Diversity in the Neotropical Genus<i>Oreobates</i>(Anura: Strabomantidae), with the Description of Three New Species from the Amazonian Slopes of the Andes
    (American Museum of Natural History, 2012) José M. Padial; Juan C. Chaparro; Santiago Castroviejo‐Fisher; Juan M. Guayasamin; Edgar Lehr; Amanda J. Delgado; Marcos Vaira; Mauro Teixeira; Rodrigo Aguayo; Ignacio De la Riva
    We revisit species diversity within Oreobates (Anura: Strabomantidae) by combining molecular phylogenetic analyses of the 16S rRNA amphibian barcode fragment with the study of the external morphology of living and preserved specimens. Molecular and morphological evidence support the existence of 23 species within Oreobates, and three additional candidate species (Oreobates sp. [Ca JF809995], Oreobates sp. [Ca EU368903], Oreobates cruralis [Ca EU192295]). We describe and name three new species from the Andean humid montane forests of Departamento Cusco, southern Peru: O. amarakaeri New Species from Río Nusinuscato and Río Mabe, at elevations ranging from 670 to 1000 m in the Andean foothills; O. machiguenga, new species, from Río Kimbiri (1350 m), a small tributary of the Apurimac River, in the western versant of Cordillera Vilcabamba; and O. gemcare, new species, from the Kosñipata Valley at elevations ranging from 2400 to 2800 m. The three new species are readily distinguished from all other Oreobates by at least one qualitative morphological character. Three species are transferred to Oreobates from three genera of Strabomantidae: Hypodactylus lundbergi Pristimantis crepitans, and Phrynopus ayacucho (for which the advertisement call, coloration in life, and male characteristics are described for first time). Oreobates simmonsi is transferred to the genus Lynchius. Hylodes verrucosus is considered a junior synonym of Hylodes philippi. In addition, H. philippi is removed from the synonymy of O. quixensis and considered a nomem dubium within Hypodactylus. The inclusion of Phrynopus ayacucho in Oreobates extends the ecological range of the genus to the cold Andean puna. Oreobates is thus distributed from the Amazonian lowlands in southern Colombia to northern Argentina, reaching the Brazilian Atlantic dry forests in eastern Brazil, across an altitudinal range from ca. 100 to 3850 m.

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