The Mixteca cloud-forest tree frog (Charadrahyla sakbah) is a frog in the family Hylidae. It is endemic to Mexico. Scientists know it exclusively from the type locality: 1390 meters above sea level in the western Sierra Madre del Sur, in Oaxaca.[2][3][1]
The adult male frog measures 81.15-85.75 mm in snout-vent length and the adult female frog 67.91-73.21 mm. Its large size distinguishes it from other members of the genus. They have hypertrophied webbed skin between their toes. Only frogs from this part of the world have webbing of this kind.[4]
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help) The Mixteca cloud-forest tree frog (Charadrahyla sakbah) is a frog in the family Hylidae. It is endemic to Mexico. Scientists know it exclusively from the type locality: 1390 meters above sea level in the western Sierra Madre del Sur, in Oaxaca.
The adult male frog measures 81.15-85.75 mm in snout-vent length and the adult female frog 67.91-73.21 mm. Its large size distinguishes it from other members of the genus. They have hypertrophied webbed skin between their toes. Only frogs from this part of the world have webbing of this kind.
La rana arborícola de la Mixteca (Charadrahyla sakbah) es una especie de anfibios de la familia Hylidae. Es endémica de México. Los científicos la han observado solamente en un lugar: El oeste de Sierra Madre del Sur, a 1390 metros sobre el nivel del mar.[1][2][3]
La rana arborícola de la Mixteca (Charadrahyla sakbah) es una especie de anfibios de la familia Hylidae. Es endémica de México. Los científicos la han observado solamente en un lugar: El oeste de Sierra Madre del Sur, a 1390 metros sobre el nivel del mar.