Allobates

Genus of amphibians

Allobates
Brilliant-thighed poison frog (Allobates femoralis)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Aromobatidae
Subfamily: Allobatinae
Genus: Allobates
Zimmermann and Zimmermann, 1988
Species

58, see text

Allobates is a genus of frogs in the family Aromobatidae.[1] They are native to the Central and South Americas, from Nicaragua to Bolivia and Brazil, with one species on Martinique.[1][2]

Description and ecology

Species of the genus Allobates are mostly small frogs. Dorsal colouration is cryptic, with the exception of the Allobates femoralis group that has bright colours. They are mostly terrestrial frogs found in the leaf litter of tropical rain forests. Most species deposit eggs in the leaf litter; tadpoles are transported to the water on the backs of the parents. Allobates nidicola and Allobates chalcopis, however, have endotrophic tadpoles that develop into froglets in the nest, without entering water.[2]

Taxonomy

There are 58 species recognised in the genus Allobates:[1][3]

  • Allobates algorei Barrio-Amorós and Santos, 2009
  • Allobates amissibilis Kok, Hölting, and Ernst, 2013[4]
  • Allobates bacurau Simões, 2016
  • Allobates bromelicola (Test, 1956)
  • Allobates brunneus (Cope, 1887)
  • Allobates caeruleodactylus (Lima and Caldwell, 2001)
  • Allobates caldwellae Lima, Ferrão, and Silva, 2020
  • Allobates carajas Simões, Rojas, and Lima, 2019
  • Allobates caribe (Barrio-Amorós, Rivas-Fuenmayor, and Kaiser, 2006)
  • Allobates chalcopis (Kaiser, Coloma, and Gray, 1994)
  • Allobates conspicuus (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates crombiei (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates femoralis (Boulenger, 1884)
  • Allobates flaviventris Melo-Sampaio, Souza, and Peloso, 2013
  • Allobates fratisenescus (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates fuscellus (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates gasconi (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates goianus (Bokermann, 1975)
  • Allobates granti (Kok, MacCulloch, Gaucher, Poelman, Bourne, Lathrop, and Lenglet, 2006)
  • Allobates grillicantus Moraes and Lima, 2021
  • Allobates grillisimilis Simões, Sturaro, Peloso, and Lima, 2013[5]
  • Allobates hodli Simões, Lima, and Farias, 2010
  • Allobates humilis (Rivero, 1980)
  • Allobates ignotus Anganoy-Criollo, 2012
  • Allobates insperatus (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates juami Simões, Gagliardi-Urrutia, Rojas-Runjaic, and Castroviejo-Fisher, 2018
  • Allobates juanii (Morales, 1994)
  • Allobates kingsburyi (Boulenger, 1918)
  • Allobates magnussoni Lima, Simões, and Kaefer, 2014
  • Allobates mandelorum (Schmidt, 1932)
  • Allobates marchesianus (Melin, 1941)
  • Allobates masniger (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates mcdiarmidi (Reynolds and Foster, 1992)
  • Allobates melanolaemus (Grant and Rodriguez, 2001)
  • Allobates myersi (Pyburn, 1981)
  • Allobates nidicola (Caldwell and Lima, 2003)
  • Allobates niputidea Grant, Acosta-Galvis, and Rada, 2007
  • Allobates nunciatus Moraes, Pavan, and Lima, 2019
  • Allobates olfersioides (Lutz, 1925)
  • Allobates ornatus (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates pacaas Melo-Sampaio, Prates, Peloso, Recoder, Vechio, Marques-Souza, and Rodrigues, 2020
  • Allobates paleovarzensis Lima, Caldwell, Biavati, and Montanarin, 2010
  • Allobates peruvianus (Melin, 1941)
  • Allobates pittieri (La Marca, Manzanilla, and Mijares-Urrutia, 2004)
  • Allobates ranoides (Boulenger, 1918)
  • Allobates sanmartini (Rivero, Langone, and Prigioni, 1986)
  • Allobates sieggreenae Gagliardi-Urrutia, Castroviejo-Fisher, Rojas-Runjaic, Jaramillo-Martinez, Solís, and Simões, 2021
  • Allobates subfolionidificans (Lima, Sanchez, and Souza, 2007)
  • Allobates sumtuosus (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates talamancae (Cope, 1875)
  • Allobates tapajos Lima, Simões, and Kaefer, 2015
  • Allobates tinae Melo-Sampaio, Oliveira, and Prates, 2018
  • Allobates trilineatus (Boulenger, 1884)
  • Allobates undulatus (Myers and Donnelly, 2001)
  • Allobates vanzolinius (Morales, 2002)
  • Allobates velocicantus Souza, Ferrão, Hanken & Lima, 2020
  • Allobates wayuu (Acosta-Galvis, Cuentas, and Coloma, 1999)
  • Allobates zaparo (Silverstone, 1976)

References

  1. ^ a b c Frost DR (2014). "Allobates Zimmermann and Zimmermann, 1988". Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  2. ^ a b Vitt LJ, Caldwell JP (2014). Herpetology: An Introductory Biology of Amphibians and Reptiles (4th ed.). Academic Press. pp. 487–488.
  3. ^ Souza JR, Ferrão M, Hanken J, Lima AP (2020-11-04). "Allobates) from Brazilian Amazonia with a remarkably fast multi-noted advertisement call". PeerJ. 8: e9979. doi:10.7717/peerj.9979. PMC 7648453. PMID 33194373.
  4. ^ Kok PJ, Hölting M, Ernst R (December 2013). "A third microendemic to the Iwokrama Mountains of central Guyana: a new "cryptic" species of Allobates Zimmerman and Zimmerman, 1988 (Anura: Aromobatidae)". Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 13 (4): 621–38. doi:10.1007/s13127-013-0144-4. S2CID 18493157.
  5. ^ Simões PI, Sturaro MJ, Peloso PL, Lima AP (January 2013). "A new diminutive species of Allobates Zimmermann and Zimmermann, 1988 (Anura, Aromobatidae) from the northwestern Rio Madeira-Rio Tapajós interfluve, Amazonas, Brazil". Zootaxa. 3609 (3): 251–73. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3609.3.1. PMID 24699589.

External links

  • Data related to Allobates at Wikispecies
  • Media related to Allobates at Wikimedia Commons
  • "The Chirping Frog" - 2018 BBC internet article on new species found in the Pico da Neblina National Park, Brazil
Taxon identifiers
Allobates