Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)

Autores
Cei, José Miguel Alfredo María
Año de publicación
1968
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
artículo
Estado
versión publicada
Descripción
Lepidobatrachus is a characteristic Chacoan genus of the Ceratophryidae, which we consider to be an independent Neotropical phyletic line of leptodactylids. Its earliest known representative is the Miocene Wawelia from Patagonia (Casamiquela, 1963). Since the discovery of the genus by Budgett (1899), Lepidobatrachus has received relatively little comment. Vellard (1948) redescribed the type-species, and the generic status has been confirmed by Cei (1958), Reig and Cei (1963), and Barrio (1967) utilizing various lines of investigation. The latter author proposes recognizing three species: L. laevis Budgett, L. asper Budgett (L. salinicola Reig and Cei is a synonym), and L. llanensis Reig and Cei, whose distributions are largely allopatric but in part sympatric (Fig. 1). Except for Parker’s (1931) brief description and figures of the tadpole of Lepidobatrachus asper (= either asper or laevis by current concepts), the larvae of the genus have not been described. The tadpoles of L. asper and L. llanensis are described and figured in this paper. These species occur in the shrub-covered flats of the Argentine Central and Western Chacoan provinces. These Chacoan frogs are characterized by a clear-cut seasonal rhythm which is correlated with the wet summers and dry winters of the semi-arid regions in which they live. During the cold dry season, they remain underground, not feeding or moulting. Mating and egg-laying occur during the rainy season (October to February). Breeding activity usually takes place in the temporary roadside pools on clay soil. The small, pigmented eggs lie on the muddy bottom. Early cleavage and development remain unknown. After hatching, individual tadpoles in various developmental stages are found swimming in the shallow parts of temporary pools. Tadpoles of L. llanensis were collected in La Rioja Llanos, near Oita (Rio Colorado), Chepes, Punta de los Llanos and Chamical, Argentina, 300-400 m in elevation. Tadpoles of L. asper were collected in the salt flats of Salares de Santiago del Estero, Argentina. All are preserved at the Instituto de Biologia, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina (IBM-UNC), and form the basis for the following descriptions.
Material digitalizado en SEDICI gracias a la colaboración del Dr. Jorge Williams (FCNM-UNLP).
Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo
Materia
Zoología
Tadpoles
Papillae
Breeding
Llanos
Lips
Beak
Larval development
Forelimbs
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Repositorio
SEDICI (UNLP)
Institución
Universidad Nacional de La Plata
OAI Identificador
oai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/88367

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oai_identifier_str oai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/88367
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network_name_str SEDICI (UNLP)
spelling Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)Cei, José Miguel Alfredo MaríaZoologíaTadpolesPapillaeBreedingLlanosLipsBeakLarval developmentForelimbsLepidobatrachus is a characteristic Chacoan genus of the Ceratophryidae, which we consider to be an independent Neotropical phyletic line of leptodactylids. Its earliest known representative is the Miocene Wawelia from Patagonia (Casamiquela, 1963). Since the discovery of the genus by Budgett (1899), Lepidobatrachus has received relatively little comment. Vellard (1948) redescribed the type-species, and the generic status has been confirmed by Cei (1958), Reig and Cei (1963), and Barrio (1967) utilizing various lines of investigation. The latter author proposes recognizing three species: L. laevis Budgett, L. asper Budgett (L. salinicola Reig and Cei is a synonym), and L. llanensis Reig and Cei, whose distributions are largely allopatric but in part sympatric (Fig. 1). Except for Parker’s (1931) brief description and figures of the tadpole of Lepidobatrachus asper (= either asper or laevis by current concepts), the larvae of the genus have not been described. The tadpoles of L. asper and L. llanensis are described and figured in this paper. These species occur in the shrub-covered flats of the Argentine Central and Western Chacoan provinces. These Chacoan frogs are characterized by a clear-cut seasonal rhythm which is correlated with the wet summers and dry winters of the semi-arid regions in which they live. During the cold dry season, they remain underground, not feeding or moulting. Mating and egg-laying occur during the rainy season (October to February). Breeding activity usually takes place in the temporary roadside pools on clay soil. The small, pigmented eggs lie on the muddy bottom. Early cleavage and development remain unknown. After hatching, individual tadpoles in various developmental stages are found swimming in the shallow parts of temporary pools. Tadpoles of L. llanensis were collected in La Rioja Llanos, near Oita (Rio Colorado), Chepes, Punta de los Llanos and Chamical, Argentina, 300-400 m in elevation. Tadpoles of L. asper were collected in the salt flats of Salares de Santiago del Estero, Argentina. All are preserved at the Instituto de Biologia, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina (IBM-UNC), and form the basis for the following descriptions.Material digitalizado en SEDICI gracias a la colaboración del Dr. Jorge Williams (FCNM-UNLP).Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo1968-06info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionArticulohttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501info:ar-repo/semantics/articuloapplication/pdf141-146http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/88367enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/issn/00180831info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)reponame:SEDICI (UNLP)instname:Universidad Nacional de La Platainstacron:UNLP2025-09-29T11:17:43Zoai:sedici.unlp.edu.ar:10915/88367Institucionalhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/oai/snrdalira@sedici.unlp.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:13292025-09-29 11:17:43.767SEDICI (UNLP) - Universidad Nacional de La Platafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
title Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
spellingShingle Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
Cei, José Miguel Alfredo María
Zoología
Tadpoles
Papillae
Breeding
Llanos
Lips
Beak
Larval development
Forelimbs
title_short Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
title_full Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
title_fullStr Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
title_full_unstemmed Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
title_sort Notes on the Tadpoles and Breeding Ecology of Lepidobatrachus (Amphibia: Ceratophryidae)
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Cei, José Miguel Alfredo María
author Cei, José Miguel Alfredo María
author_facet Cei, José Miguel Alfredo María
author_role author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Zoología
Tadpoles
Papillae
Breeding
Llanos
Lips
Beak
Larval development
Forelimbs
topic Zoología
Tadpoles
Papillae
Breeding
Llanos
Lips
Beak
Larval development
Forelimbs
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv Lepidobatrachus is a characteristic Chacoan genus of the Ceratophryidae, which we consider to be an independent Neotropical phyletic line of leptodactylids. Its earliest known representative is the Miocene Wawelia from Patagonia (Casamiquela, 1963). Since the discovery of the genus by Budgett (1899), Lepidobatrachus has received relatively little comment. Vellard (1948) redescribed the type-species, and the generic status has been confirmed by Cei (1958), Reig and Cei (1963), and Barrio (1967) utilizing various lines of investigation. The latter author proposes recognizing three species: L. laevis Budgett, L. asper Budgett (L. salinicola Reig and Cei is a synonym), and L. llanensis Reig and Cei, whose distributions are largely allopatric but in part sympatric (Fig. 1). Except for Parker’s (1931) brief description and figures of the tadpole of Lepidobatrachus asper (= either asper or laevis by current concepts), the larvae of the genus have not been described. The tadpoles of L. asper and L. llanensis are described and figured in this paper. These species occur in the shrub-covered flats of the Argentine Central and Western Chacoan provinces. These Chacoan frogs are characterized by a clear-cut seasonal rhythm which is correlated with the wet summers and dry winters of the semi-arid regions in which they live. During the cold dry season, they remain underground, not feeding or moulting. Mating and egg-laying occur during the rainy season (October to February). Breeding activity usually takes place in the temporary roadside pools on clay soil. The small, pigmented eggs lie on the muddy bottom. Early cleavage and development remain unknown. After hatching, individual tadpoles in various developmental stages are found swimming in the shallow parts of temporary pools. Tadpoles of L. llanensis were collected in La Rioja Llanos, near Oita (Rio Colorado), Chepes, Punta de los Llanos and Chamical, Argentina, 300-400 m in elevation. Tadpoles of L. asper were collected in the salt flats of Salares de Santiago del Estero, Argentina. All are preserved at the Instituto de Biologia, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina (IBM-UNC), and form the basis for the following descriptions.
Material digitalizado en SEDICI gracias a la colaboración del Dr. Jorge Williams (FCNM-UNLP).
Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo
description Lepidobatrachus is a characteristic Chacoan genus of the Ceratophryidae, which we consider to be an independent Neotropical phyletic line of leptodactylids. Its earliest known representative is the Miocene Wawelia from Patagonia (Casamiquela, 1963). Since the discovery of the genus by Budgett (1899), Lepidobatrachus has received relatively little comment. Vellard (1948) redescribed the type-species, and the generic status has been confirmed by Cei (1958), Reig and Cei (1963), and Barrio (1967) utilizing various lines of investigation. The latter author proposes recognizing three species: L. laevis Budgett, L. asper Budgett (L. salinicola Reig and Cei is a synonym), and L. llanensis Reig and Cei, whose distributions are largely allopatric but in part sympatric (Fig. 1). Except for Parker’s (1931) brief description and figures of the tadpole of Lepidobatrachus asper (= either asper or laevis by current concepts), the larvae of the genus have not been described. The tadpoles of L. asper and L. llanensis are described and figured in this paper. These species occur in the shrub-covered flats of the Argentine Central and Western Chacoan provinces. These Chacoan frogs are characterized by a clear-cut seasonal rhythm which is correlated with the wet summers and dry winters of the semi-arid regions in which they live. During the cold dry season, they remain underground, not feeding or moulting. Mating and egg-laying occur during the rainy season (October to February). Breeding activity usually takes place in the temporary roadside pools on clay soil. The small, pigmented eggs lie on the muddy bottom. Early cleavage and development remain unknown. After hatching, individual tadpoles in various developmental stages are found swimming in the shallow parts of temporary pools. Tadpoles of L. llanensis were collected in La Rioja Llanos, near Oita (Rio Colorado), Chepes, Punta de los Llanos and Chamical, Argentina, 300-400 m in elevation. Tadpoles of L. asper were collected in the salt flats of Salares de Santiago del Estero, Argentina. All are preserved at the Instituto de Biologia, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina (IBM-UNC), and form the basis for the following descriptions.
publishDate 1968
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 1968-06
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
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