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Description

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Large frog, females 48.8-110mm SVL, males 25-59.7mm SVL (Narayan et al. 2008). Discs of fingers are small, only slightly larger than toe discs. Maxillary and vomerine teeth present. Colour variable, dorsal surface varies from light brown, reddish brown, greenish brown to dark brown. There is usually an X marking on the shoulders, nearly always a white spot on each shoulder, and if no white spot, a white vertebral stripe running the length of the body. Ventral surface whitish sometimes with traces of brown. Hind limbs have dark crossbars. Males lack nuptial pads.Taxonomy: Many people have noticed that the spelling of this taxon has changed from Platymantis vitianus to P. vitiana. Here are some comments on this subject by David Wake: "The species described by Dumeril in 1853 as Hylodes vitianus is a valid species, but through the course of time it has been shifted about taxonomically from Hylodes to Platymantis by Gunther in 1858. Linguistic analysis has since revealed that there is a gender error in Latin syntax. The species name does not agree with the generic name, necessitating a change to vitiana. It is unclear exactly who made this spelling change but it was not AWeb. Frost 1985 uses vitianus but in his current on-line Amphibian Species of the World (Feb 2006) he uses vitiana and so I believe it is Frost who has made the change. At AmphibiaWeb we generally defer to Frost who is very careful to get his Latin right."

References

  • Gorham, S. W. (1971). ''Field identification of Fiji's frogs.'' Fiji Agricultural Journal, 33, 31-33.
  • Morrison, C. (2003). A Field Guide to the Herpetofauna of Fiji. Institute of Applied Sciences, University of the South Pacific, Fiji.
  • Narayan, E, Christi, K., and Morley, C. (2007). ''Captive management of newly hatched Fijian ground frog Platymantis vitianus froglets: lessons learnt from an unanticipated invertebrate predator invasion, Suva, Fiji.'' Conservation Evidence, 4, 58-60.
  • Narayan, E, Christi, K., and Morley, C. (2007). ''Improvement in ex-situ egg hatchability of Fijian ground from Platymantis vitianus by laboratory incubation of egg masses, University of the South Pacific, Suva, Fiji.'' Conservation Evidence, 4, 25-27.
  • Narayan, E., Christi, K. and Morley, C. (2007). ''Provision of egg-laying sites for captive breeding of the endangered Fijian ground frog Platymantis vitianus, University of the South Pacific, Suva, Fiji .'' Conservation Evidence, 4, 61-65.
  • Narayan, E., Christi, K., and Morley, C. (2008). ''Ecology and reproduction of the endangered Fijian Ground Frog Platymantis vitianus - Fiji Islands.'' South Pacific Journal of Natural Science, 26, 28-32.
  • Ryan, P. A. (1984). ''Fiji amphibia.'' Domodomo, 2(2), 87-98.
  • Ryan, P. A. (1985). ''A coastal habitat for Fiji's ground frog and a first record from Gau.'' Herpetological Review , 16(3), 72.
  • Ryan, P. A. (2000). Fiji's Natural Heritage. Exisle Publishing, New Zealand.
  • Zug, G. R. (1983). ''Natural history notes on the ground frog (Ranidae, Platymantis vitianus).'' Herpetological Review, 14(3), 68-69.

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Distribution and Habitat

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Endemic to Fiji. Historically, has been recorded from several islands on the wetter, eastern side of Fiji including Viti Levu, Vanua Levu, Ovalau, Taveuni, Koro, Gau, Kadavu and Viwa. Currently thought to be restricted to islands without mongoose predators – Ovalau, Taveuni, Gau, Viwa, and a single population on Vanua Levu. Recent surveys (2003-2004) have located several large populations of P. vitianus on these islands. Has been recorded in lowland and upland rainforest, coastal stand vegetation and agricultural habitats at altitudes ranging from sea-level to 830m. Mainly found on the forest floor but has also been found in low bushes and shrubs (up to 2m above ground). Has also been found along the beach on Viwa and Gau Islands. Rarely found on rocks along streams. During the day they shelter under logs, piles of coconut husks, or in rock crevices, or lie immobile pressed flat against the ground in small depressions under leaf litter.
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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Adults have been found all year round with peaks in activity and abundance in the wetter months between November and April. Metamorphs and juveniles are also found throughout the year with peaks in late March-June. Males call from elevated perches in trees, low shrubs and rocks. The advertisement call is a short, sharp whistle. Both sexes have been reported to have distress calls (Narayan et al. 2008): rubbing the underbelly gently will induce males to emit a softer call that sounds like bird chirps, while females emit a louder distress call that resembles a dog barking. Amplexus has not been observed. Approximately 40 large, white eggs (4-7mm diameter) in moist rotten logs on the ground. Coconut husks are also used as egg deposition sites (Ryan 2000). Gravid females have been observed throughout the year on Viwa Island, indicating that reproduction is probably continuous rather than annual (Narayan et al. 2008). However, breeding frequency (gauged by observation of metamorphs, froglets and egg masses) does show a rise towards the end of the year on Viwa Island, coincident with higher rainfall (Narayan et al. 2008). The male may guard the clutch (Narayan et al. 2007b). There is no tadpole stage and the eggs take 4-5 weeks to develop directly into froglets. Good swimmers and capable of leaps of >1m. When threatened will puff themselves up with air and release copious amounts of bladder water. When under duress will occasionally vocalise with a series of short, almost birdlike calls. Insectivorous.
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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Was once fairly widespread in eastern Fiji but is thought to be extirpated from much of its habitat on the main islands of Viti Levu and Vanau Levua. This recent probable extirpation from mainland Fiji has been attributed to predation by mongoose and to a lesser extent, rats and cats. Competition from cane toads and predation by cane toads on small/young frogs is also thought to have a detrimental effect on populations. Currently this species is only known from five mongoose-free islands and one population on Vanua Levu (second largest island in Fiji, has mongoose). Due to its small, fragmented extent of occurrence and continuing decline due to predation it is currently listed as Endangered under IUCN (2008) criteria.A captive breeding program was initiated in 2006 by scientists at the University of the South Pacific, using ten frogs from Viwa Island (Narayan et al. 2007a; 2007b; 2007c).
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Cornufer vitianus

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Cornufer vitianus, commonly known as Fiji ground frog or Viti wrinkled ground frog, is a species of frog in the family Ceratobatrachidae. It is endemic to Fiji.[2]

Presumed to be originally a forest species, it is nowadays also found in a range of man-made habitats, including degraded forest, rural gardens, plantations, and even close to the beach.[1]

The Fiji ground frog is found on four larger islands (Taveuni, Vanua Levu, Ovalau, and Gau) and a small island, Viwa, (0.6 ha) off the eastern coast of the main island (Viti Levu) of the Fiji archipelago. The species maintains populations throughout the forested (primary, secondary and coastal/littoral) parts of these islands (Osborne, unpublished data).

A largish frog, it can grow up to 100 g and to body lengths (SUL) of 110 mm. The larger individuals tend to be a very dull dark brown (sometimes with yellow spots on either side of the head near the tympanum). However, smaller adults and juvenile frogs can be highly polymorphic in coloration, with banding and stippling in darker or lighter hues of red, brown, green and curry-yellow. It is distinguished from the Cornufer vitiensis by its larger size and smaller toe pads.

The Fiji ground is a nocturnal ground dweller, however, individuals have been encountered on low branches and leaves of riparian forest vegetation. It is thought to be a sit and wait predator, waiting for nocturnal insects to venture nearby.

Reproduction

The breeding cycle of these frogs is affected by extrinsic environmental conditions and intrinsic reproductive hormonal mechanisms. During the active breeding phase mature gravid females clearly show the presence of large creamy eggs. Nesting occurs terrestrially, mostly underneath rotting logs, and crevices within coconut tree bark and within bamboo. This species lays around 50-60 eggs inside prepared nests and covered with leaf litter. Embryonic development takes place over 29–30 days and froglets hatch directly from eggs forgoing the tadpole stage. The age at maturity of C. vitianus is still not known.

References

  1. ^ a b IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2020). "Cornufer vitianus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T17518A83669326. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T17518A83669326.en. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  2. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2019). "Cornufer vitianus (Duméril, 1853)". Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  • Kuruyawa, J., Osborne, T., Thomas, N., Rounds, I., Morrison, C. and Morley, C. 2004. Distribution, abundance and conservation status of the Fijian Ground Frog (Platymantis vitianus). Unpublished report for the BP Conservation Programme.
  • Narayan, E., Christi, K., and Morley, C. (2008). Ecology and reproduction of the endangered Fijian Ground Frog Platymantis vitianus - Fiji Islands. South Pacific Journal of Natural Science, 26, 28–32.
  • Ryan, P. 2000. Fiji's Natural Heritage. Exisle Publishing Limited, Auckland.
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Cornufer vitianus: Brief Summary

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Cornufer vitianus, commonly known as Fiji ground frog or Viti wrinkled ground frog, is a species of frog in the family Ceratobatrachidae. It is endemic to Fiji.

Presumed to be originally a forest species, it is nowadays also found in a range of man-made habitats, including degraded forest, rural gardens, plantations, and even close to the beach.

The Fiji ground frog is found on four larger islands (Taveuni, Vanua Levu, Ovalau, and Gau) and a small island, Viwa, (0.6 ha) off the eastern coast of the main island (Viti Levu) of the Fiji archipelago. The species maintains populations throughout the forested (primary, secondary and coastal/littoral) parts of these islands (Osborne, unpublished data).

A largish frog, it can grow up to 100 g and to body lengths (SUL) of 110 mm. The larger individuals tend to be a very dull dark brown (sometimes with yellow spots on either side of the head near the tympanum). However, smaller adults and juvenile frogs can be highly polymorphic in coloration, with banding and stippling in darker or lighter hues of red, brown, green and curry-yellow. It is distinguished from the Cornufer vitiensis by its larger size and smaller toe pads.

The Fiji ground is a nocturnal ground dweller, however, individuals have been encountered on low branches and leaves of riparian forest vegetation. It is thought to be a sit and wait predator, waiting for nocturnal insects to venture nearby.

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