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Incilius melanochlorus (Cope 1877)

Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por AmphibiaWeb articles
Bufo melanochlorus is a relatively large toad with a snout-vent length of 73.6 mm for males and 106.7 mm for females. This species has a distinct sexual dimorphism. The females are larger than the males, but the males have longer heads. During the breeding season, males develop nuptial pads, consisting of dark, thickened patches on the dorsal surface of each thumb. Males also have more muscular forearms than the female. Females have more pairs of irregular black dorsal spots, a middorsal stripe, and a variable dorsal pattern (Guyer and Donnelly 2005; O'Neill and Mendelson 2004). The dorsal skin is smooth, except for the scapular and iliac regions, which are unevenly covered with small, low, and rounded spiculae (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004; Cope 1877). The ventral skin is minutely roughened (Cope 1877). There is also a lateral row of tubercles consisting of a series of medium-sized, sharply pointed spicules (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004).The head is greater in width than length, while its skin is co-ossified to the upper surface of the skull. It has well-developed cranial crests that are thin and high (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004). There are transverse folds between parietal, prolonged branch crests (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004; Cope 1877). The preorbital and pretympanic crests are absent in both sexes, but the canthal, supraorbital, and postpreorbital crests are well-developed. Bufo melanochlorus also has a small tympanum and elevated orbital borders (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004). The diameter of the distinctly round external tympanic disc is half that of the orbit (Savage 2002). The eyes are large and distinct, while the tongue is long and narrow (Savage 2002). The snout is rounded in profile, but has a dorsal outline that is sharply pointed in males and subelliptical in females (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004; Savage 2002). The vocal slits are small and bilateral with a large, unilobed, heavily pigmented, internal vocal sac (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004, Savage 2002). For males, this vocal sac becomes fully distended and round when calling. The parotoid glands are small (about 3/4 the size of the upper eyelid) and triangular with a row of low, rounded, lateral warts extending to the groin (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004; Savage 2002). Finger I is longer than finger II and both have dark-brown nuptial pads on the upper surface in adult males. There are well-developed single subarticular and supernumerary tubercles under the fingers and the toes. Occasionally, the third finger has a subarticular tubercle as well (Savage 2002). Bufo melanochlorus has short hindlegs (Cope 1877). The upper surface of the hind limbs have many large pointed warts (Savage 2002). The tibia is short, only 45-50% of the SVL. The feet are relatively short as well (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004). The toes are long with some webbing (Cope 1877; Guyer and Donnelly 2005). The outer metatarsal tubercle is large and rounded, while the inner metatarsal tubercle is elevated and elongate (Savage 2002). This species has a body color that is dominantly brown or gray with irregular dark gray or black blotches (Guyer and Donnelly 2004). It has a light, thick middorsal stripe, and paler gray dorsolateral stripes (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004). There is also a broad, dark lateral stripe that is bordered by light warts above. The venter is dark gray or brown with light flecks on the anterior side and light gray with mottled spots on the posterior side. The head is brown dorsally with distinct crests running from each nostril, behind the eye, to the back of the head. Each eye has a squarely-shaped, tan patch below it, extending to the upper lip, which separates a mottled dark brown region behind the eye to the ventral edge of the parotoid gland. This gives the frog an appearance of a black eye mask. The iris is coppery bronze with a black reticulum. The throat and chest are black, while the lower jaw has white spots along the ventral edge. The legs are mottled with light and dark brown colors (Guyer and Donnelly 2005). The tips of the digits are either the same color as the rest of the digits, or distinctly paler (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004). The juvenile is more brightly colored than the adult (Guyer and Donnelly 2005).Bufo melanochlorus is similar to many other species, but can be distinguished by differences in morphology or color. The adult Bufo melanochlorus is similar to Bufo coniferus (Green Climbing Toad, also known as Ollotis conifera) in size, but has a first finger that is nearly as long as the third, longest finger, whereas the Green Climbing Toad has a shorter first finger. Bufo aucoinae is also similar, but male Bufo melanochlorus are larger, and all B. melanochlorus can be distinguished by having transverse folds between parietal crests, cranial crests that are elevated vertically, distinct pretympanic and preorbital crests, a black chest and throat, and mottling on the flanks (O'Neill and Mendelson 2004).A Spanish-language species account can be found at the website of Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INBio) (http://darnis.inbio.ac.cr/FMPro?-DB=UBIpub.fp3&-lay=WebAll&-Format=/ubi/detail.html&-Op=bw&id=4376&-Find).

Referências

  • Cope, E. D. (1877). ''Tenth contribution to the herpetology of tropical America.'' Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 17, 85.
  • IUCN, Conservation International, and NatureServe. 2004. Global Amphibian Assessment. < www.globalamphibians.org >. Accessed on 28 November 2006.
  • McDiarmid, R.W., and Savage, J. M. (2005). ''The herpetofauna of the Rincon area, Peninsula de Osa, Costa Rica, a Central American lowland evergreen forest site.'' Ecology and evolution in the tropics: a herpetological perspective. A. G. Kluge, M. A. Donnelly, B. I. Crother, C. Guyer, and M. H. Wake, eds., University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
  • O'Neill, E. M. and Mendelson, J. R. (2004). ''Taxonomy of Costa Rican toads referred to Bufo melanochlorus Cope, with the description of a new species.'' Journal of Herpetology, 38(4), 487–494.

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Distribution and Habitat ( Inglês )

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This species occurs along the lowlands and premontane slopes of the Atlantic versant and lowland and premontane evergreen forests within the Pacific west of Costa Rica. Its range includes the Atlantic, montane slopes and Cordillera Central, and the extreme southern portion of the Pacific Northwest faunal areas of Costa Rica, as defined by Savage (2002). It is common at higher elevations within the wet forests, especially along the forest edge, and is found up to 1,080 meters above sea level. It is usually seen in association with large streams or occasionally found in forest litter (Guyer and Donnelly 2005; O'Neill and Mendelson 2004; McDiarmid and Savage 2005; Savage 2002).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors ( Inglês )

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Bufo melanochlorus is nocturnal and insectivorous (McDiarmid and Savage 2005). The male calls during the dry season (January to February) from pools along rocky streams, within 0.5 meters of water (Savage 2002). Two males were also found calling from an open pond with several Bufo marinus in August (McDiarmid and Savage 2005). The call is similar to Bufo luetkenii and Bufo valliceps, consisting of a short trill lasting several seconds, repeated several times with intervals lasting a few seconds (Savage 2002). The male and female breed in fairly rocky-bottomed small streams at low water. Amplexus is axillary (Savage 2002).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors ( Inglês )

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The major threats to this species include alterations of its stream habitat due to pollution. The pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis has also been proposed as a potential future threat. This species occurs in Costa Rican National Parks and other protected areas, including La Selva and Monteverde, under population monitoring (IUCN 2006).
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Incilius melanochlorus ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Incilius melanochlorus, formerly Bufo melanochlorus,[4][1] is a mid-sized species of toad with a crested head[2] in the family Bufonidae.[1] It is primarily distinguished by its very long first finger with respect to the other fingers.[2] It is found in southern Nicaragua, in the northern Cordillera Central (central highlands) and on the Atlantic slopes of eastern Costa Rica, and in western Panama.[3][4]

Vernacular names

Frank and Ramus (1995) give it the common name dark green toad,[3] Panamanian herpetologists Jaramillo and Ibáñez (2009) use wet forest toad[4] or west forest toad according to Darrel R. Frost[3] (likely a misspelling). A local Spanish name from Costa Rica specifically for this species is sapo Costaricense de la selva,[5] but it also just known as sapo.[6]

Taxonomy

The first article about this species was published in 1875 by Edward Drinker Cope who wrote of the toad as a particular but unnamed variety of Bufo valliceps from eastern Costa Rica. It was described as a novel species in its own right in 1877 by Cope under the name B. melanochlorus. The holotype is a specimen (undesignated in Cope's original publication, but thought to be USNM30592) taken in Limón Province sometime before 1877 by W. W. Gabb.[2][3] The specific epithet melanochlorus is compounded from the Ancient Greek μελανω (melanō), meaning "blackened"[7] and χλωρός (khlōrós) meaning “(yellowish) green”.[8] The English name invented by Frank and Ramus[3] is thus a simple transliteration.

In 2004 O'Neill and Mendelson moved this species from Bufo to Incilius, and while doing so split the taxon into two species, a western I. aucoinae and the nominate taxon.[1] Earlier publications use Bufo melanochlorus.[9] In 2006 Darrel Frost et al. moved the species to the old genus Cranopsis originally erected by Cope in 1875 with C. fastidiosus as the type species.[3][10] It was controversial[11] and this approach was not followed by everyone.[1][12] It subsequently necessitated moving Cranopsis toads to the new genus Cranophryne as the genus name Cranopsis proved to have already been used by Adams to describe a mollusc in 1860.[13] In 2009 Pauly et al. suggested that because the recent partitioning of Bufo had made the formerly monophyletic genus paraphyletic and that the new genera were too imperfectly defined to be phylogeneticly stable, as the large number of recent (officially mandated) name changes caused by Frost in 2006 was evidencing, and that the hitherto done genetic analyses were yet too vague to properly resolve relationships, thus Incilius should be treated as a subgenus of Bufo.[11] Frost refuted these criticisms in a 2009 response. A phylogenetic analysis by Mendelson based on morphology, life history, and molecular data was published 2011 which recommending sinking Cranopsis/Cranophryne, Ollotis and Crepidius/Crepidophryne back into Incilius.[14]

Mendelson et al. (2011) suggest that this species is part of an I. valliceps species group, or more specifically in what they termed the "Forest Group" subgroup, including the taxa I. aucoinae, I. cavifrons, I. campbelli, I. cristatus, I. leucomoyos, I. macrocristatus, I. spiculatus and I. tutelarius.[3]

Description

Incilius melanochlorus are moderately large toads, with males attaining 65 mm (2.6 in)[4] to 74 mm (2.9 in)[12] in snout–vent length, and females 103 mm (4.1 in)[4] to 107 mm (4.2 in).[12] There is marked sexual dimorphism, the females having more irregular dark colouration on their back and being larger, but the males having longer heads and more brawny forearms.[12]

The head is wider than it is long.[12] The head is crested,[2] with the cranium sporting well-developed, thin and high crests.[4][12] This crest ornamentation consists of canthal, supraorbital, and postpreorbital crests, and parietal crests with transverse folds between them (other species have crests on other locations). The crests run from the nostril, behind the eye, to the back of the head. The skin of the top of the head is hardened and stuck to the top of the skull.[12] Males have a vocal sac.[4] The vocal slits which hide the vocal sac inside the throat are small and bilateral, the sac has a single lobe, and is large, heavily pigmented[12] with a greenish cast,[4] and when calling inflates fully to a round shape. The eyes are large with a coppery bronze iris and a black pupil,[12] the top half of the iris lighter than the bottom half, with a thin, dark line separating the two halves.[4] The tongue is long and thin.[12] The paratoid glands are small,[4][12] smaller than the upper eyelid,[12] and triangular in shape,[4][12] and the toad has a small tympanum.[12]

The hind legs are relatively short, as are the feet and the tibia, but the toes are long and have some webbing between them. The first finger is longer than the second. The fingers and toes have tubercles underneath them. Sometimes the tips of the fingers and toes are lighter-coloured, sometimes the same colour as the rest of the digit. The tarsus (heel) has two differently-shaped tubercles, one facing inwards, the other outwards.[12]

The dorsum (back) is very warty,[4] but is covered in a smooth skin except near the shoulders and hips, which has small, low and rounded protrusions. The ventral side has a minutely roughened surface.[12] The lateral side of the toad is bordered along the upper part with a row of light-coloured, low to medium-sized, sharp but rounded, spine-shaped warts extending from the paratoid gland to the groin.[4][12] The upper surface of the hind limbs is covered in many large, pointed warts.[12]

In general the colour of this toad is brown or grey, mottled with irregular splotches of dark gray or black.[12] There is a thin[4] or thick,[12] lighter coloured, mid-dorsal stripe down the back.[4][12] The dorsal colouration is light brown, often with lighter brown[4] or pale grey[12] bands toward the sides of the back.[4][12] In females and juveniles the dorsum has darker brown mottling. The sides are dark,[4] with a broad, dark stripe below the row of lateral warts.[12] The ventral surface has a yellowish base,[4] while the throat and chest are black,[2][12] and the underside of the lower jaw has white spots along the edge. The eyes have a tan-coloured, square-shaped patch below them, reaching to the lip. There is a mottled dark brown region from the eye to the edge of the paratoid gland, which appears somewhat like a mask. The legs are mottled with light and dark brown,[12] with dark bars on the upper surface of the thighs.[4] The juvenile is somewhat more brightly coloured.[12]

Call

The call is a "short trill" with toads having a round, inflated vocal sac.[4] The call is several seconds long, and is repeated several times, with the intervals between each trill lasting a few seconds.[12]

Similar species

In the field it is most similar to Incilius coniferus, being most easily told apart by the length of the first finger of the hand being nearly as long as the third, longest finger in the species, whereas in I. coniferus the first finger is shorter. Incilius aucoinae is very similar, but males of that species are smaller, and this species has a black chest and throat, mottling on the flanks, transverse folds between parietal crests, cranial crests that are heightened vertically, and distinct pretympanic and preorbital crests.[12]

According to Jay M. Savage (2002) the call is similar to I. luetkenii or I. valliceps.[12]

Distribution

In the 1960s the range was considered to include Nicaragua, but in 1972 Villa stated all earlier collections from this country were to be considered misidentified specimens of Incilius luetkenii or I. valliceps.[3] It was subsequently believed to be endemic to Costa Rica.[9][6] In 2004 similar toads from the Pacific slopes of Costa Rica were reassigned to a new species, I. aucoinae.[1]

In Costa Rica it occurs throughout the northern section of the Cordillera Central at mid-latitudes, and throughout the Cordillera de Talamanca and the eastern Caribbean seaboard. As of 2008 it is unclear if I. melanochlorus also occurs on the Pacific slopes of Costa Rica, or if those are misidentified I. aucoinae.[1] McDiarmid and Savage recorded it in 2005 in meadows of the Peninsula de Osa, extending the distribution to the Pacific slopes in the far southwest of the country.[4][12] According to Pounds et al. in 1997, it disappeared from Monteverde, Costa Rica, in the late 1980s and then reappeared there in the 1990s.[1]

In 2004 the toad was recorded in Nicaragua for first time (correctly) in the Indio Maíz Biological Reserve by Gunther Köhler and his team,[1] in 2009 it was also recorded from Río San Juan under auspices of an expedition by Köhler[4] and in 2014 it was reported in Rivas Department on the Pacific coast by a Nicaraguan team.[3] In 2009 the distribution was extended to Panama following Jaramillo and Ibáñez (2009).[3]

Ecology

This toad is nocturnal and insectivorous.[12] The toads may become more active during light rain showers.[2]

Habitat

The native habitats of this species are wet lowland rainforests and the lower premontane wet forests at elevations to about 1,080 m (3,540 ft) asl.[1] Its favourite locations are near large streams and at the edges of forests.[12] In the northeastern rainforests of Costa Rica it occurs from sea level to 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in elevation, with frogs of the genus Eleutherodactylus being the few amphibians to occur at higher altitudes here.[6] It is occasionally found amongst the leaf litter on the forest floor.[12]

Reproduction

Reproduction happens during the dry season[4][12] starting with the males calling from January to February from pools along rocky streams, or within 50 cm (20 in) of water. Males may call at odd times of the year. Males develop dark-brown nuptial pads on their first and second fingers during breeding season.[12] Although some sources claim breeding (amplexus) takes place in large streams,[1][4] according to Savage (2002) it occurs in small, somewhat rocky-bottomed streams which are at low water for the season.[12]

Interspecific relationships

Male toads may share their pools with the larger Bufo marinus toads.[12]

Diseases

The pathogenic fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis has had no impact on this toad.[1]

Conservation

When the species had been less studied, earlier authors such as Bolaños & Chaves writing for the IUCN in 2004 mistakenly believed it to be endemic to Costa Rica.[9][6] As such it was automatically added to the local Red List and considered threatened. It was described in 2004 as most likely not very tolerant of deforestation and siltation and pollution of its breeding habitat, but nonetheless it was downgraded to "least concern" in 2004.[9] As of 2008 the IUCN describes it as "widespread and regularly encountered" and "common and somewhat adaptable with a presumed large population". It is regularly seen during the breeding period,[1] and is common in wet forests at higher elevations at favoured habitats.[12] It occurs at La Selva Biological Station, in the Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve (if correctly identified)[1] and throughout the Maquenque National Wildlife Refuge in Costa Rica,[6] and in the Indio Maíz Biological Reserve[1][4] and Río San Juan Wildlife Refuge in Nicaragua.[4] It is kept in an ex situ collection at the Costa Rican Amphibian Research Center.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2020). "Incilius melanochlorus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T54705A54359101. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T54705A54359101.en. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Taylor, Edward H. (1 July 1952). "A Review of the Frogs and Toads of Costa Rica". The University of Kansas Science Bulletin. 35 (1): 616–618. doi:10.5962/bhl.part.4328. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Frost, Darrel R. (2015). "Incilius melanochlorus (Cope, 1877)". Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa "Incilius melanochlorus Cope 1877". Amphibians of Panama. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
  5. ^ a b Paull, Julia. "Mother Nature's Son". Julia Paull. Julia Paull. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e Mauricio Salas Varga (2009). Humedales de Ramsar (FIR) – Anexo #2 Biodiversidad 2009 (PDF) (Report) (in Spanish). Centro Científico Tropical. p. 8. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  7. ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). "μελανω". A Greek–English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  8. ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). "χλωρός". A Greek–English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  9. ^ a b c d IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2020). "Incilius melanochlorus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T54705A54359101. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T54705A54359101.en. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  10. ^ Frost, D. R.; Grant, T.; Faivovich, J. N.; Bain, R. H.; Haas, A.; Haddad, C. L. F. B.; De Sá, R. O.; Channing, A.; Wilkinson, M.; Donnellan, S. C.; Raxworthy, C. J.; Campbell, J. A.; Blotto, B. L.; Moler, P.; Drewes, R. C.; Nussbaum, R. A.; Lynch, J. D.; Green, D. M.; Wheeler, W. C. (2006). "The amphibian tree of life". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 297: 1–291. doi:10.1206/0003-0090(2006)297[0001:TATOL]2.0.CO;2. hdl:2246/5781.
  11. ^ a b Pauly, Greg B.; Hillis, David M.; Cannatella, David C. (2009). "Taxonomic freedom and the role of official lists of species names". Herpetologica. 65 (2): 115–128. doi:10.1655/08-031R1.1. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Kim, Stella; Whittaker, Kellie (2 November 2009). "Incilius melanochlorus: Wet Forest Toad". AmphibiaWeb. University of California Berkeley. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  13. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2013). "Incilius Cope, 1863". Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  14. ^ Mendelson III, Joseph R.; Mulcahy, Daniel G.; Williams, Tyler S.; Sites Jr., Jack W. (21 December 2011). "A phylogeny and evolutionary natural history of mesoamerican toads (Anura: Bufonidae: Incilius) based on morphology, life history, and molecular data". Zootaxa. 3138 (1): 1–34. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3138.1.1. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
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Incilius melanochlorus: Brief Summary ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Incilius melanochlorus, formerly Bufo melanochlorus, is a mid-sized species of toad with a crested head in the family Bufonidae. It is primarily distinguished by its very long first finger with respect to the other fingers. It is found in southern Nicaragua, in the northern Cordillera Central (central highlands) and on the Atlantic slopes of eastern Costa Rica, and in western Panama.

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Incilius melanochlorus ( Espanhol; Castelhano )

fornecido por wikipedia ES

Incilius melanochlorus[1][2][3]​ es una especie de anfibio anuro de la familia Bufonidae.

Distribución geográfica

Esta especie es endémica de Centroamérica. Habita desde el nivel del mar hasta los 1080 m de altitud:

Su presencia es incierta en Nicaragua.

Publicación original

  • Cope, 1878 "1877" : Tenth contribution to the herpetology of tropical America. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, vol. 17, p. 85–98[5]

Referencias

  1. Catalogue of Life : Incilius melanochlorus (Cope, 1877) Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2018
  2. Animal Diversity Web : Incilius melanochlorus especie de anfibio anuro Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2018
  3. ITIS : Incilius melanochlorus especie de anfibio anuro Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2018
  4. AmphibiaWeb : Incilius melanochlorus (Cope, 1877) Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2018
  5. Amphibian Species of the World: Incilius melanochlorus (Cope, 1877) Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2018

 title=
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Incilius melanochlorus: Brief Summary ( Espanhol; Castelhano )

fornecido por wikipedia ES

Incilius melanochlorus​​​ es una especie de anfibio anuro de la familia Bufonidae.

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Incilius melanochlorus ( Basco )

fornecido por wikipedia EU

Incilius melanochlorus Incilius generoko animalia da. Anfibioen barruko Bufonidae familian sailkatuta dago, Anura ordenan.

Erreferentziak

Ikus, gainera

Kanpo estekak

(RLQ=window.RLQ||[]).push(function(){mw.log.warn("Gadget "ErrefAurrebista" was not loaded. Please migrate it to use ResourceLoader. See u003Chttps://eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berezi:Gadgetaku003E.");});
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Incilius melanochlorus: Brief Summary ( Basco )

fornecido por wikipedia EU

Incilius melanochlorus Incilius generoko animalia da. Anfibioen barruko Bufonidae familian sailkatuta dago, Anura ordenan.

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Incilius melanochlorus ( Francês )

fornecido por wikipedia FR

Incilius melanochlorus est une espèce d'amphibiens de la famille des Bufonidae[1].

Répartition

 src=
Distribution

Cette espèce est endémique du centre de l'Amérique centrale[1]. Elle se rencontre du niveau de la mer à 1 080 m d'altitude :

Sa présence est incertaine au Nicaragua.

Publication originale

  • Cope, 1878 "1877" : Tenth contribution to the herpetology of tropical America. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, vol. 17, p. 85–98 (texte intégral).

Notes et références

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Incilius melanochlorus: Brief Summary ( Francês )

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Incilius melanochlorus est une espèce d'amphibiens de la famille des Bufonidae.

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Cranopsis melanochlorus ( Vietnamita )

fornecido por wikipedia VI

Bufo melanochlorus là một loài cóc trong họ Bufonidae. Chúng là loài đặc hữu của Costa Rica. Các môi trường sống tự nhiên của chúng là các khu rừng ẩm ướt đất thấp nhiệt đới hoặc cận nhiệt đới, các khu rừng vùng núi ẩm nhiệt đới hoặc cận nhiệt đới, và sông. Loài này đang bị đe dọa do mất nơi sống.

Tham khảo

Liên kết ngoài

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Cranopsis melanochlorus: Brief Summary ( Vietnamita )

fornecido por wikipedia VI

Bufo melanochlorus là một loài cóc trong họ Bufonidae. Chúng là loài đặc hữu của Costa Rica. Các môi trường sống tự nhiên của chúng là các khu rừng ẩm ướt đất thấp nhiệt đới hoặc cận nhiệt đới, các khu rừng vùng núi ẩm nhiệt đới hoặc cận nhiệt đới, và sông. Loài này đang bị đe dọa do mất nơi sống.

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Wikipedia tác giả và biên tập viên
original
visite a fonte
site do parceiro
wikipedia VI