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Raorchestes chalazodes (Günther 1876)

Description ( Anglèis )

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The adult female holotype had a snout-vent length of 26 mm, and a hind limb length of 42 mm (Gunther 1876). The male snout-vent length was 23.7 mm (Seshadri et al. 2015). The obtusely rounded snout of Raorchestes chalazodes is short and about as long as its eye. The canthal ridge is indistinct (Gunther 1876). The head is moderately sized and almost as long as it is broad, with the nostrils being located closer to the tip of the snout than to the eye (Chanda 2002). The eyes are large and protruding. The supra-tympanic fold is barely noticeable (Sivaprasad 2013) and the tympanum is skin-covered. Overall, the skin is smooth, but in the region between the abdomen and thigh, there are several series of white, smooth tubercles. There are also smaller tubercles located in the anal region and along the tarsus. The length of R. chalazodes’s body is equal to its leg length. There is no fold on the tarsus. The metatarsus has a small, mostly indistinct tubercle. The fingers are relatively free, whereas the toes are half-webbed, with large disks (Gunther 1876).Raorchestes chalzodes has a rounded snout, well-developed supernumerary tubercles on hands and toes, moderate toe webbing that reaches just below the third subarticular tubercle of toe IV on the inside and just past the third subarticular tubercle of toe IV on the outside, which differs from P. beddomii, which has a pointed to nearly oval snout, absent or weakly developed supernumerary tubercles and reduced webbing that reaches up to the second subarticlar tubercle on either side of toe IV. Raorchestes chalazodes also has a foot length (13.1 mm) subequal to its shank (13.3 mm) and thigh length (13.2 mm), whereas P. beddomii’s foot length (9.5 mm) is noticeably shorter than its shank (11.8 mm) and thigh length (11.6 mm) (Biju and Bossuyt 2009). The reproductive mode of R. chalazodes is similar to that of R. ochlandrae. The ‘Palghat Gap’ physically separates the geographic ranges of these species and they nest in different species of bamboo, but morphology and nest characteristics are similar. Both species display parental care and lay their eggs in the upward end of the internode with the entrances being located toward the downward end, presumably to avoid water accumulation from drowning the eggs or froglets (Seshadri et al. 2015). In life, the dorsal surface appears uniformly greenish, with the exception of the white tubercles. The ventral side of R. chalazodes appears yellowish-white with white tubercles. The femur, on its anterior and posterior surfaces, is yellow with traces of green marbling (Gunther 1876). The eyes in this species have a black pupil connected to a black ring around the margin of the eye, and a yellow iris (Sivaprasad 2013). In preservative, the specimens of this species become almost uniformly blueish-grey, with slightly more grey ventral sides. Tubercles appear white (Biju and Bossuyt 2009).Variation has not currently been described.The species authority is: Günther, A. (1876). ''Third report on collection of Indian reptiles obtained by British Museum.'' Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 567-577.No phylogeny of the clade including R. chalazodes and R. ochlandrae is currently available, but the similarity of reproductive mode suggests that the two species evolved in parallel or that there is an ancestral linkage (Seshadri et al. 2015).Raochestes chalazodes has undergone several name changes. When it was discovered in 1875, it was named Ixalus chalazodes by Günther. In 1931, Ahl referred to the species as Rhacophorus (Philautus) chalazodes (Dinesh et al. 2009). In 1985, the species underwent a genus nomenclature change to Philautus (Chanda 2002), before being changed to Raorchestes chalazodes.The word “chalazodes” is derived from the Greek word for grain “chalaza”, and refers to the white tubercles found on the body of the species (Biju and Bossuyt 2009). It was suggested by Bossuyt and Dubois (2001) that Ixalus chalazodes was synonymous with Ixalus beddomii Günther, 1876, but this has since been disproven by Biju, who identified the species as distinct (Biju et al. 2004; Stuart et al. 2008).Raorchestes chalazodes was presumed to be extinct shortly after its original discovery in 1875 because it was not found in surveys. However, it was recently rediscovered in 2010, 136 years later, by Ganesan, Seshadri and Biju (Lost Amphibians of India, 2010; Seshadri et al. 2015). (image, http://amphibiaweb.org/images/amazing/amazing_logo.jpg) Featured in Amazing Amphibians on May 27, 2013 (http://amphibiaweb.org/amazing_amphibians/20130527_Raorch_chalazodes.html)

Arferiment

  • Biju, S. D., and Bossuyt, F. (2009). ''Systematics and phylogeny of Philautus Gistel, 1848 (Anura, Rhacophoridae) in the Western Ghats of India, with descriptions of 12 new species.'' Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 155, 374-444.
  • Bossuyt, F., and Dubois, A. (2001). ''A review of the frog genus Philautus Gistel, 1848 (Amphibia, Anura, Ranidae, Rhacophorinae).'' Zeylanica, 6, 1-112.
  • Dinesh, K. P., Radhakrishnan, C., Gururaja, K. V., and Bhatta, G. (2009). ''An annotated checklist of Amphibia of India with some insights into the patterns of species discoveries, distribution and endemism.'' Records of the Zoological Survey of India, Occasional Papers, 302, 1-153.
  • Lost Amphibians of India. (2010). Chalazodes Bubble-Nest Frog: Raorchestes Chalazodes. www.lostspeciesindia.org/LAI2/new1_rediscovered.php. Accessed on 3 November 2016.
  • S.D. Biju, Sushil Dutta, Karthikeyan Vasudevan, S.P. Vijayakumar, Chelmala Srinivasulu. 2004. Raorchestes chalazodes. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2004: e.T58829A11847257. http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T58829A11847257.en. Downloaded on 27 October 2016.
  • Seshadri, K.S., Gururaja, K.V. and Bickford, D.P. (2015). ''Breeding in Bamboo: a novel anuran reproductive strategy discovered in Rhacophorid frogs of the Western Ghats, India.'' Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 114, 1-11.
  • Sivaprasad, P.S (2013). Common Amphibians of Kerala (English). Kerala State Biodiversity Board, Thiruvananthapuram.

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Distribution and Habitat ( Anglèis )

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The holotype of Raorchestes chalazodes was originally found in 1875 in Travancore, the southern areas of what is now known as Kerala, a state in the southernmost tip of India, along the Malabar coast (Gunther 1876). The paratypes were all found in the Kalakad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve which spans from 8.416°N to 8.883°N and 77.166°E to 77.583°E, at an altitude of >1000m above sea level, in the Western Ghats of India, in 2010. This region has two season of heavy rainfall, receiving about 3000 mm per year in total. Most specimens were observed in the native bamboo, Ochlandra travancoria, which grows alongside streams in the primary and secondary forests in the Kakachi and Upper Kodayar areas of the reserve (Seshadri et al. 2015).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors ( Anglèis )

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IUCN classifies the species as "Critically Endangered" because it is only known to occur in an area of less than 100 km2, and occupies an area of less than 10 km2. The distribution of R. chalazodes is severely fragmented and there is a noted decline in the extent and quality of its current habitat (Biju et al. 2004).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors ( Anglèis )

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A novel mode of reproduction was observed in R. chalazodes. The polyandrous females of this species lay 5 - 8 direct developing eggs inside a hollow bamboo internode without stagnant water. If amplexus occurs, it must happen within the bamboo internode. Eggs are spherical, 5.73 mm in diameter and transparent, allowing the creamy white yolks to be seen. The ratio of egg yolk to the outer jelly is small. The eggs are laid approximately 25 cm above the opening in the bamboo, and multiple clutches can be found within the same internode. The eggs are attached to the inner wall of the bamboo with a mucilaginous strand. If multiple clutches were present (average of 1.5 clutches per internode), they were separated by gaps of a few millimeters. Each clutch size averages 6.7 eggs. The narrow entry offers considerable resistance, indicating that laying the eggs inside bamboo is a non-random event. For 24 hours after hatching, the froglets remain close to the egg capsules (Seshadri et al. 2015). The males of the species care for the eggs as they develop until they hatch and can frequently be found vocalizing nocturnally from inside the bamboo and around the narrow entry/exit opening presumably made by insects or rodents. Adult males are found vocalizing between 1800 and 0100h, and this appears to be a method of attracting females (Seshadri et al. 2015).
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Philautus chalazodes ( Catalan; Valensian )

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Philautus chalazodes és una espècie de granota que es troba a l'Índia.

Es troba amenaçada d'extinció per la pèrdua del seu hàbitat natural.

Referències

 src= A Wikimedia Commons hi ha contingut multimèdia relatiu a: Philautus chalazodes Modifica l'enllaç a Wikidata


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Philautus chalazodes: Brief Summary ( Catalan; Valensian )

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Philautus chalazodes és una espècie de granota que es troba a l'Índia.

Es troba amenaçada d'extinció per la pèrdua del seu hàbitat natural.

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குமிழ் தவளை ( tamil )

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குமிழ் தவளை[2] (Raorchestes chalazodes) இது ரகோபோரிடாஸ் என்ற குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த ஒரு தவளை இனமாகும். இது இந்தியாவின் மேற்குத் தொடர்ச்சி மலைகளில் காணப்படக்கூடியது.[1][3] மிக அரிதான, அழியும் தருவாயில் உள்ள தவளை ஆகும். 136 ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பிறகு மேற்குத் தொடர்ச்சி மலையில் உள்ள களக்காடு முண்டந்துறை புலிகள் காப்பகத்தில் மீண்டும் கண்டறியப்பட்டுள்ளது. இத்தவளையின் முட்டை தலைப்பிரட்டையாக மாறாமல், நேரடியாகச் சிறு தவளையாக மாறிவிடும் சிறப்புத்தன்மை கொண்டது.[2]

விளக்கம்

இதில் பெண் தவலையானது 28 மிமீ (1.1 அங்குலம்) நீளமுடையன.[4] இவற்றின் உடல் பச்சை நிறமுடையவையாக இருக்கும். அடிப்பகுதி வெள்ளை நிறத்தோடும், இடுப்புப் பகுதியில் கரு நீல புள்ளிகள் உள்ளன. இதன் தனித்துவமான அடையாளமாக இதன் விழிபடலத்தில் தங்கநிற திட்டுகள் கானப்படும்.[5]

மேற்கோள்கள்

  1. 1.0 1.1 வார்ப்புரு:IUCN2013.1
  2. 2.0 2.1 மு. மதிவாணன் (2017 ஏப்ரல் 29). "காணாமல் போன ‘கரகர குரல்’". கட்டுரை. இந்து தமிழ். பார்த்த நாள் 21 பெப்ரவரி 2019.
  3. Frost, Darrel R. (2013). "Raorchestes chalazodes (Günther, 1876)". Amphibian Species of the World 5.6, an Online Reference. American Museum of Natural History. பார்த்த நாள் 14 July 2013.
  4. Günther, A. C. L. G. (1876). "Third report on collections of Indian reptiles obtained by the British Museum". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1875: 567–577. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/67162.
  5. "Chalazodes bubble-nest frog: Raorchestes chalazodes". Lost Amphibians of India. பார்த்த நாள் 11 November 2013.
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குமிழ் தவளை: Brief Summary ( tamil )

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குமிழ் தவளை (Raorchestes chalazodes) இது ரகோபோரிடாஸ் என்ற குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த ஒரு தவளை இனமாகும். இது இந்தியாவின் மேற்குத் தொடர்ச்சி மலைகளில் காணப்படக்கூடியது. மிக அரிதான, அழியும் தருவாயில் உள்ள தவளை ஆகும். 136 ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பிறகு மேற்குத் தொடர்ச்சி மலையில் உள்ள களக்காடு முண்டந்துறை புலிகள் காப்பகத்தில் மீண்டும் கண்டறியப்பட்டுள்ளது. இத்தவளையின் முட்டை தலைப்பிரட்டையாக மாறாமல், நேரடியாகச் சிறு தவளையாக மாறிவிடும் சிறப்புத்தன்மை கொண்டது.

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Raorchestes chalazodes ( Anglèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes (Chalazodes bubble-nest frog, white-spotted bush frog, or Günther's bush frog) is a species of critically endangered frog in the family Rhacophoridae. Raorchestes chalazodes is a nocturnal and arboreal species found in the understorey of tropical moist evergreen forest and is endemic to the Western Ghats of India.[2][3] The specific name chalazodes is composed of the Greek word χάλαζα (chalaza) meaning "lump" and -odes for the derived adjective, reflecting white granulation of the body.[4]

The original holotype was collected in 1876 by Colonel Richard Henry Beddome in Travancore and given to Albert C. L. G. Günther. Before its rediscovery in 2011 in the Upper Kodayar Region in Tamil Nadu, the species was thought to be extinct. Raorchestes chalazodes make their oviposition sites in the internodes of the Ochlandra travancorica species of bamboo, where the adult male will take care of the egg clutch. Raorchestes chalazodes is also the only species in its genus that is reported to exhibit parental care.[5] It is now considered critically endangered by IUCN.

Description

The overall body coloration of Raorchestes chalazodes is green with a purplish white ventral region and black-blue spots on the groin region. Some distinguishing characteristics of the species is a rounded snout, a lingual papilla on the tongue, and well-developed supernumerary tubercles. Raorchestes chalazodes also has moderate toe webbing.[6] One of its most unique and distinctive traits is its eye: a black iris with golden patches.[7]

Holotype

The holotype is an adult female collected in Travancore by Colonel Richard Henry Beddome, and given to Albert C. L. G. Günther, who described it.[8] This specimen is 26 mm long with the hind limbs measuring 42 mm long. The dorsal surface is described as a uniform green, whereas the ventral surface is a yellowish-white color. The dorsal surface also has tubercles that look like white spots. These tubercles are presumed to be the reason Gunther named the species "chalazodes".[6]

Habitat and distribution

Raorchestes chalazodes is found in the narrow region of the Western Ghats on the West Coast of peninsular India, where they are restricted to elevations over 1200 m.[9] It lives in the tropical and moist evergreen forest understory. More specifically, Raorchestes chalazodes are found in the endemic understory of the Ochlandra travancorica bamboo that is found in the area.[9] This bamboo forms a shrubby habitat that often forms impenetrable clumps next to stream banks, which offers protection.[9]

Conservation

Habitat loss

Raorchestes chalazodes is currently classified as critically endangered by the most recent assessment by The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in 2004. This assessment results from how the distribution of the species is severely fragmented and how the species experiences a continual decline in the extent and quality of its forest habitat.[10]

The Ochlandra travancorica species of bamboo that Raorchestes chalazodes uses for oviposition sites is often harvested for use for biofuel and the manufacturing of paper and pulp. Because of this, Ochlandra travancorica has been severely depleted in the Western Ghats.[11]

Conservation efforts

In a study on Raorchestes chalazodes in 2018, 43 egg clutches with male guardians were found in 5 km2 sampling site at Kalakad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve.[9] To help with conservation, a mapping of Ochlandra travancorica distribution to identify threatened areas that are not under protection is a vital first step of action. Additionally, there are more viable actions that can be taken to help with the conservation of Raorchestes chalazodes. Bamboo with smaller diameters can be harvested, or harvesting can be banned during the breeding season of Raorchestes chalazodes from May to November. Artificial oviposition sites that resemble those found in the wild can also be created.[11][9]

Diet

Raorchestes chalazodes mainly consumes invertebrates such as insects and spiders, but have also been observed to eat other invertebrates such as molluscs. Specifically, Raorchestes chalazodes was observed consuming Satiella dekkanensis, a type of snail that does not possess a hard shell. Before the breeding season, adult male frogs will forage for large prey such as Satiella dekkanensis to prepare for the long period of caregiving.[12]

Mating

The breeding season of Raorchestes chalazodes is between the months of May and November.[9] During this breeding season, males will find an internode in Ochlandra travancorica bamboo that has an opening and will vocalize inside the internode to attract females.[13] Because males stay near one internode, females are presumed to be polyandrous and move from one internode to the next with amplexus occurring inside the internode.[13] After the mating season ends, which is the months of November to December, the males will stop vocalizing and vacate the oviposition sites inside the internodes of the bamboo.[9]

Parental care

In Raorchestes chalazodes, there is direct parental care of offspring and in this species, the males are the sole providers of parental care. Males will have varied behavior to try to take care of egg clutches. Some of these strategies include egg attendance, egg guarding, and aggressive behavior to defend the oviposition site or itself. In egg attendance, the adult male frog will remain at a particular oviposition site regardless of time. In egg guarding, the adult male frog will be perched in front of the eggs in the internode presumably to deter a perceived threat. The adult male frog will also exhibit aggressive behavior such as aggressive vocalization or lunging at threats such as conspecific males and arthropods such as katydids and cockroaches entering the internode. During the day, the adult male frog will sleep near the egg clutch with its eyes half closed and limbs brought close to its body. During the time period of parental care, the caregiver may not forage or feed.[9]

This parental care serves as a way to protect the clutch from the many threats the eggs face. The mortality rate of unattended eggs is much higher than those of attended eggs, and the main source of egg mortality is from predation. The main cause of predation is cannibalism from conspecific males who are thought to be unsuccessful in finding a mate and defending their own oviposition site. As a male providing care regularly vocalizes which could signal territory ownership, a lack of vocalization may lead to these cannibalistic males attempting to take of the oviposition site and eating the nutrient rich eggs in the clutch. Egg parasitism from flies and oophagy from ants are also predation issues, but the male caregiver may eat the intruding ants and flies, which serves as a form of sustenance. Another cause of egg mortality is fungal infection.[9]

Oviposition sites

Nests are made in the internodes of the Ochlandra travancorica species of bamboo. The adult frogs can get in through a small opening near the base of the internode. It is hypothesized that if the internode has an opening at the top, water could collect inside and drown the froglets.[13] The insides of the oviposition sites have lower temperature and higher humidity compared to the outside. This higher humidity benefits the frog eggs by reducing water loss from evaporation.[9] The eggs laid are also attached to the inner wall of the bamboo through a mucilaginous strand. Inside the bamboo, these eggs will undergo direct development without water.[13]

Development

The eggs of Raorchestes chalazodes are spherical and transparent and are connected to the inner walls of the bamboo internode through a mucilaginous strand. The eggs have a creamy white yolk where the ratio of egg yolk to outer jelly is rather small.[13] After hatching, the froglets will remain inside the internode where they will vacate the oviposition site between 3 and 34 days after the first froglet emerging [9][14]

References

  1. ^ S.D. Biju, Sushil Dutta, Karthikeyan Vasudevan, S.P. Vijayakumar, Chelmala Srinivasulu (2004). "Raorchestes chalazodes". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004: e.T58829A11847257. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T58829A11847257.en. Retrieved 17 November 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ IUCN (30 April 2004). "Raorchestes chalazodes: S.D. Biju, Sushil Dutta, Karthikeyan Vasudevan, S.P. Vijayakumar, Chelmala Srinivasulu: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2004: e.T58829A11847257". doi:10.2305/iucn.uk.2004.rlts.t58829a11847257.en. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2013). "Raorchestes chalazodes (Günther, 1876)". Amphibian Species of the World 5.6, an Online Reference. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  4. ^ S. D. BIJU, FRANKY BOSSUYT, Systematics and phylogeny of Philautus. Gistel, 1848 (Anura, Rhacophoridae) in the Western Ghats of India, with descriptions of 12 new species, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, Volume 155, Issue 2, February 2009, Pages 374–444, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00466.x
  5. ^ Sayyed, Amit; Padhye, Anand (1 January 2020). "Natural history of Ghate's Shrub Frog, Raorchestes ghatei (Rhacophoridae), from the northern Western Ghats, India". Reptiles & Amphibians. 26 (3): 205–210. doi:10.17161/randa.v26i3.14405. ISSN 2332-4961. S2CID 241036207.
  6. ^ a b BIJU, S. D.; BOSSUYT, FRANKY (2009). "Systematics and phylogeny ofPhilautusGistel, 1848 (Anura, Rhacophoridae) in the Western Ghats of India, with descriptions of 12 new species". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 155 (2): 374–444. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00466.x. ISSN 0024-4082.
  7. ^ "Lost Amphibians of India - www.lostspeciesindia.org - Rediscovered". www.lostspeciesindia.org. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  8. ^ Günther, Albert C. L. G. (1876). "Third report on collections of Indian reptiles obtained by the British Museum". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. 1875: 567–577.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Seshadri, Kadaba Shamanna; Bickford, David Patrick (14 December 2017). "Faithful fathers and crooked cannibals: the adaptive significance of parental care in the bush frog Raorchestes chalazodes, Western Ghats, India". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 72 (1): 4. doi:10.1007/s00265-017-2420-3. ISSN 1432-0762. S2CID 253808316.
  10. ^ IUCN (30 April 2004). "Raorchestes chalazodes: S.D. Biju, Sushil Dutta, Karthikeyan Vasudevan, S.P. Vijayakumar, Chelmala Srinivasulu: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2004: e.T58829A11847257". doi:10.2305/iucn.uk.2004.rlts.t58829a11847257.en. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. ^ a b SijiMol, K.; Dev, Suma Arun; Sreekumar, V. B. (2016). "A Review of the Ecological Functions of Reed Bamboo, Genus Ochlandra in the Western Ghats of India: Implications for Sustainable Conservation". Tropical Conservation Science. 9 (1): 389–407. doi:10.1177/194008291600900121. ISSN 1940-0829. S2CID 88928470.
  12. ^ SHAMANNA, SESHADRI (2020). "Natural History Notes". Herpetological Review. 51 (3).
  13. ^ a b c d e Seshadri, Kadaba (2015). "Breeding in bamboo: a novel anuran reproductive strategy discovered in Rhacophorid frogs of the Western Ghats, India". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 114: 1–11. doi:10.1111/bij.12388.
  14. ^ Seshadri, Kadaba (2015). "Rhacophorid Frogs Breeding in Bamboo: Discovery of a Novel Reproductive Mode from Western Ghats". FrogLog. 23 (116): 46–49.

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Raorchestes chalazodes: Brief Summary ( Anglèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes (Chalazodes bubble-nest frog, white-spotted bush frog, or Günther's bush frog) is a species of critically endangered frog in the family Rhacophoridae. Raorchestes chalazodes is a nocturnal and arboreal species found in the understorey of tropical moist evergreen forest and is endemic to the Western Ghats of India. The specific name chalazodes is composed of the Greek word χάλαζα (chalaza) meaning "lump" and -odes for the derived adjective, reflecting white granulation of the body.

The original holotype was collected in 1876 by Colonel Richard Henry Beddome in Travancore and given to Albert C. L. G. Günther. Before its rediscovery in 2011 in the Upper Kodayar Region in Tamil Nadu, the species was thought to be extinct. Raorchestes chalazodes make their oviposition sites in the internodes of the Ochlandra travancorica species of bamboo, where the adult male will take care of the egg clutch. Raorchestes chalazodes is also the only species in its genus that is reported to exhibit parental care. It is now considered critically endangered by IUCN.

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Raorchestes chalazodes ( Spagneul; Castilian )

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Raorchestes chalazodes es una especie de anfibio anuro de la familia Rhacophoridae. Habita en la India; es endémica de las montañas Cardamomo. Esta especie se encuentra en peligro crítico de extinción debido a la destrucción de su hábitat natural. Se trata de un taxón Lázaro, pues fue redescubierto en 2003, tras 125 años sin observaciones científicas.

Referencias

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Raorchestes chalazodes: Brief Summary ( Spagneul; Castilian )

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Raorchestes chalazodes es una especie de anfibio anuro de la familia Rhacophoridae. Habita en la India; es endémica de las montañas Cardamomo. Esta especie se encuentra en peligro crítico de extinción debido a la destrucción de su hábitat natural. Se trata de un taxón Lázaro, pues fue redescubierto en 2003, tras 125 años sin observaciones científicas.

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Raorchestes chalazodes ( Basch )

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Raorchestes chalazodes Raorchestes generoko animalia da. Anfibioen barruko Rhacophoridae familian sailkatuta dago, Anura ordenan.

Erreferentziak

Ikus, gainera

Kanpo estekak

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Raorchestes chalazodes: Brief Summary ( Basch )

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Raorchestes chalazodes Raorchestes generoko animalia da. Anfibioen barruko Rhacophoridae familian sailkatuta dago, Anura ordenan.

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Raorchestes chalazodes ( Fransèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes est une espèce d'amphibiens de la famille des Rhacophoridae[1].

Répartition

Cette espèce est endémique du Sud de l'État du Kerala dans le sud-ouest de l'Inde et n'a plus été observée depuis[1].

Description

L'holotype, une femelle, décrit par Günther, mesurait 26 mm. Son dos était vert et son ventre blanc jaunâtre légèrement marbré de vert. Le spécimen a été récolté par Richard Henry Beddome, militaire et un naturaliste britannique.

Publication originale

  • Günther, 1876 "1875" : Third report on collection of Indian reptiles obtained by British Museum. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, vol. 1875, p. 567-577 (texte intégral).

Notes et références

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Raorchestes chalazodes: Brief Summary ( Fransèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes est une espèce d'amphibiens de la famille des Rhacophoridae.

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Raorchestes chalazodes ( portughèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes é uma espécie de anfíbio da família Rhacophoridae.

É endémica da Índia.

Os seus habitats naturais são: florestas subtropicais ou tropicais húmidas de baixa altitude e florestas secundárias altamente degradadas.

Está ameaçada por perda de habitat.

Referências

  1. BIJU, S.D.; DUTTA, S.; VASUDEVAN, K.; VIJAYAKUMAR, S.P.; SRINIVASULU, C. (2004). Raorchestes chalazodes (em inglês). IUCN 2013. Lista Vermelha de Espécies Ameaçadas da IUCN de 2013 . Página visitada em 21 de setembro de 2013..
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Raorchestes chalazodes: Brief Summary ( portughèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes é uma espécie de anfíbio da família Rhacophoridae.

É endémica da Índia.

Os seus habitats naturais são: florestas subtropicais ou tropicais húmidas de baixa altitude e florestas secundárias altamente degradadas.

Está ameaçada por perda de habitat.

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Philautus chalazodes ( vietnamèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes là một loài ếch trong họ Rhacophoridae. Chúng là loài đặc hữu của Ấn Độ.

Các môi trường sống tự nhiên của chúng là các khu rừng ẩm ướt đất thấp nhiệt đới hoặc cận nhiệt đới và các khu rừng trước đây bị suy thoái nặng nề. Loài này đang bị đe dọa do mất môi trường sống.

Hình ảnh

Tham khảo

  1. ^ Biju, S.D., Dutta, S., Vasudevan, K., Vijayakumar, S.P. & Srinivasulu, C. (2004). Raorchestes chalazodes. Sách Đỏ IUCN các loài bị đe dọa. Phiên bản 2013.1. Liên minh Bảo tồn Thiên nhiên Quốc tế. Truy cập ngày 14 tháng 7 năm 2013.

Liên kết ngoài

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Hình tượng sơ khai Bài viết họ Ếch cây này vẫn còn sơ khai. Bạn có thể giúp Wikipedia bằng cách mở rộng nội dung để bài được hoàn chỉnh hơn.
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Philautus chalazodes: Brief Summary ( vietnamèis )

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Raorchestes chalazodes là một loài ếch trong họ Rhacophoridae. Chúng là loài đặc hữu của Ấn Độ.

Các môi trường sống tự nhiên của chúng là các khu rừng ẩm ướt đất thấp nhiệt đới hoặc cận nhiệt đới và các khu rừng trước đây bị suy thoái nặng nề. Loài này đang bị đe dọa do mất môi trường sống.

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