| Literature DB >> 24990059 |
Abel Batista1, Andreas Hertz2, Konrad Mebert3, Gunther Köhler4, Sebastian Lotzkat4, Marcos Ponce5, Milan Vesely6.
Abstract
Forest canopy-dwelling frogs are usually among the rarest anuran species observed in the neotropical forest, mainly because they fall outside of the scope of the standard search methods used by herpetologists. During field explorations undertaken in western and eastern Panama in recent years, we discovered two species belonging to the genus Ecnomiohyla, which showed significant differences in genetic distances (16S mtDNA gene) and morphological characteristics different from any known Ecnomiohyla species. The first specimen originates from the Serranía de Jingurudó, Darién province, southeastern Panamá, and is described herein as E. bailarina sp. nov., and the second specimen was found at Santa Fe National Park, Veraguas province, central-western Panama, and is described as E. veraguensis sp. nov. We provide a detailed description of both new species, including comparisons of morphological and molecular characters of almost all members of the genus in lower Central America, as well as an identification key for the entire genus.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24990059 DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3826.3.2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zootaxa ISSN: 1175-5326 Impact factor: 1.091