Similar looking sisters: A new sibling species in the Pristimantis danae group from the southwestern Amazon basin (Anura, Strabomantidae)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Köhler, Jörn; Glaw, Frank; Aguilar-Puntriano, César; Castroviejo-Fisher, Santiago; Chaparro, Juan C.; De la Riva, Ignacio; Gagliardi-Urrutia, Giussepe; Gutiérrez, Roberto; Vences, Miguel; Padial Fregenal, José ManuelEditorial
Pensoft Publishers
Materia
Amphibia bioacoustics integrative taxonomy
Fecha
2024-05-16Referencia bibliográfica
Köhler, J. et. al. Zoosyst. Evol. 100 (2) 2024, 565–582. [https://doi.org/10.3897/zse.100.119143]
Patrocinador
SERFOR (#192-2015-SERFOR-DGGSPFFS) and (#007-2014-SERFOR-DGGSPFFS, #0406-2017-SERFOR- DGGSPFFS); MUBI were collected with permits #024-2017-SERFOR-DGGSPFFS (SERFOR) and #001-2013-SERNANP-PNAP (Resolución Jefatural del Área Natural Protegida Parque Nacional Alto Purús)Resumen
We describe a new frog species that is the sibling of Pristimantis reichlei. These two sister species inhabit the Amazonian lowlands
and adjacent foothills of the Andes, from central Bolivia to central Peru. Pristimantis reichlei occurs from central Bolivia to southern
Peru (Alto Purús National Park), while the new species occurs from northern Bolivia (Departamento Pando) to Panguana in central
Peru (Departamento Huánuco), at elevations between 220 and 470 m a.s.l. In spite of their morphological crypsis, these siblings
occur in syntopy without evidence of interbreeding (in the Alto Purús area) and are recovered as reciprocally monophyletic. Their
uncorrected pairwise genetic distances in the 16S rRNA gene range from 9.5–13.5%, and their advertisement calls differ in both
qualitative and quantitative traits. Moreover, our study found uncorrected pairwise distances within the new species of up to 5.0%
and up to 9.3% within P. reichlei. We therefore cannot rule out the possible existence of hybrids or additional species-level lineages
hidden in this complex. Furthermore, we found another potential pair of sibling species composed of P. danae and an unnamed lineage,
with divergences of 9.4% in the 16S gene, whose in-depth analysis and taxonomic treatment are pending future revision. With
the new nominal species, the Pristimantis danae species group now includes 20 species, distributed across the upper Amazon basin
and in the eastern Andes, from western Brazil to Bolivia and Peru. Our study, together with an increasing number of other studies,
indicates that sibling species are far from being rare among Amazonian amphibians and that species resolution remains low even for
groups that have received considerable attention in recent years.