Back to Search Start Over

A new species of Brachycephalus (Anura: Brachycephali­dae) from Serra do Tabuleiro, Southern Brazil

Authors :
Sarah Mângia
Diego José Santana
Leandro de Oliveira Drummond
Leandro Talione Sabagh
Luiz Ugioni
Paulo Nogueira Costa
Milena Wachlevski
Source :
Vertebrate Zoology, Vol 73, Iss , Pp 575-597 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Pensoft, 2023.

Abstract

The number of described species of Brachycephalus has rapidly increased in the last decade (n = 22, which represents 56% of the total). Species of the genus Brachycephalus are mostly distributed in isolated mountaintops from Bahia (northeastern Brazil) to Santa Catarina states (southern Brazil), each one occupying only one or a few adjacent mountaintops. Herein, we described a new species of Brachycephalus of the B. pernix group, from Serra do Tabuleiro in Santa Catarina state, which also represents the southernmost known species. The new species can be distinguished from its congeners by a combination of characters, including the following: (1) “bufoniform” body; (2) small adult SVL: 9.57–11.10 mm for males and 10.88–12.70 mm for females; (3) head proportionally small (HL/SVL 19–28%) and eye proportionally large (ED/HL 36–56%); (4) dorsum texture rough; (5) snout shape rounded in dorsal and lateral views; (6) general dorsal body color olive green with head, arms and legs yellow-orangish scattered with olive green, and an orangish vertebral stripe spotted with white and brown colors; (7) skull and skeleton without hyperossification; (8) frontoparietal and sphenethmoid not fused; (9) advertisement with one or two high-frequency notes (6,115–6,562 Hz), and 2–4 pulses per note. The type locality is adjacent to Parque Estadual da Serra do Tabuleiro, a protected area, but we observed various agricultural activities in this locality, including the presence of exotic plants, which can change the amount and the quality of leaf litter, somehow compromising the population of the new species. Another aggravating factor is that the municipality of São Bonifácio has conflicts over land use with irregular occupation and unfinished expropriation processes in Parque Estadual da Serra do Tabuleiro. Considering that Brachycephalus sp. nov. is probably a mountaintop microendemic species, it is paramount that future studies quantifying the new species’ full distribution and evaluating population trends to accurately assess its conservation status.

Subjects

Subjects :
Zoology
QL1-991

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26258498
Volume :
73
Issue :
575-597
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Vertebrate Zoology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4864af977a7b44c2a0d7d2c82d4bf11f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3897/vz.73.e102098