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1. State of the Amphibia 2020: A Review of Five Years of Amphibian Research and Existing Resources

2. Cryptic diversity of a widespread global pathogen reveals expanded threats to amphibian conservation

3. Specimen collection: An essential tool

4. Among the world's smallest vertebrates: a new miniaturized flea-toad (Brachycephalidae) from the Atlantic rainforest.

5. Parental care contributes to vertical transmission of microbes in a skin-feeding and direct-developing caecilian.

6. Redefining Possible: Combining Phylogenomic and Supersparse Data in Frogs.

7. Diversity and function of the fused anuran radioulna.

8. A new genus and species of frog from the Kem Kem (Morocco), the second neobatrachian from Cretaceous Africa.

9. Semicircular canal size constrains vestibular function in miniaturized frogs.

10. Re-evaluating the morphological evidence for the re-evolution of lost mandibular teeth in frogs.

11. Rapid phenotypic change in a polymorphic salamander over 43 years.

12. Discovering and Applying the Urban Rules of Life to Design Sustainable and Healthy Cities.

13. Rampant tooth loss across 200 million years of frog evolution.

14. Size, microhabitat, and loss of larval feeding drive cranial diversification in frogs.

15. A new species of Rain Frog (Brevicipitidae, Breviceps ) endemic to Angola.

16. Macroevolutionary Patterns of Sexual Size Dimorphism Among African Tree Frogs (Family: Hyperoliidae).

17. Evolutionary integration of the frog cranium.

18. Evolution of hyperossification expands skull diversity in frogs.

19. The earliest record of Caribbean frogs: a fossil coquí from Puerto Rico.

20. Dietary Partitioning in Two Co-occurring Caecilian Species ( Geotrypetes seraphini and Herpele squalostoma ) in Central Africa.

21. Predicting the Impact of Describing New Species on Phylogenetic Patterns.

22. Cryptic diversity of a widespread global pathogen reveals expanded threats to amphibian conservation.

23. Xenopus fraseri: Mr. Fraser, where did your frog come from?

24. A new ancient lineage of frog (Anura: Nyctibatrachidae: Astrobatrachinae subfam. nov.) endemic to the Western Ghats of Peninsular India.

25. The earliest equatorial record of frogs from the Late Triassic of Arizona.

26. A new earless species of Poyntonophrynus (Anura, Bufonidae) from the Serra da Neve Inselberg, Namibe Province, Angola.

27. The earliest direct evidence of frogs in wet tropical forests from Cretaceous Burmese amber.

28. Two new species of the Brachycephalus pernix group (Anura: Brachycephalidae) from the state of Paraná, southern Brazil.

29. Phylogenomics reveals rapid, simultaneous diversification of three major clades of Gondwanan frogs at the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary.

30. Identification, synthesis and mass spectrometry of a macrolide from the African reed frog Hyperolius cinnamomeoventris .

31. A new species of Brachycephalus (Anura: Brachycephalidae) from Santa Catarina, southern Brazil.

32. The evolution of reproductive diversity in Afrobatrachia: A phylogenetic comparative analysis of an extensive radiation of African frogs.

33. Data Sources for Trait Databases: Comparing the Phenomic Content of Monographs and Evolutionary Matrices.

34. Dramatic Declines of Montane Frogs in a Central African Biodiversity Hotspot.

35. Genetics, Morphology, Advertisement Calls, and Historical Records Distinguish Six New Polyploid Species of African Clawed Frog (Xenopus, Pipidae) from West and Central Africa.

36. Finding our way through phenotypes.

37. Unification of multi-species vertebrate anatomy ontologies for comparative biology in Uberon.

38. The vertebrate taxonomy ontology: a framework for reasoning across model organism and species phenotypes.

39. An adaptive radiation of frogs in a southeast Asian island archipelago.

40. Do larval traits re-evolve? Evidence from the embryogenesis of a direct-developing salamander, Plethodon cinereus.

41. A unified anatomy ontology of the vertebrate skeletal system.

42. An ancient origin for the enigmatic flat-headed frogs (Bombinatoridae: Barbourula) from the islands of Southeast Asia.

43. DNA damage in preserved specimens and tissue samples: a molecular assessment.

44. Concealed weapons: erectile claws in African frogs.

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