Amphibian Diversity on Floating Meadows in Flooded Forests of the Peruvian Amazon
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BIOLOGICAL INVENTORIES REPORTS ARE PUBLISHED BY: Betty Moore Foundation./This Publication Has Been Funded in Part by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
biological rapid inventories 12 Perú: Ampiyacu, Apayacu, Yaguas, Medio Putumayo Nigel Pitman, Richard Chase Smith, Corine Vriesendorp, Debra Moskovits, Renzo Piana, Guillermo Knell y/and Tyana Wachter, editores/editors ABRIL/APRIL 2004 Instituciones y Comunidades Participantes/ Participating Institutions and Communities The Field Museum Comunidades Nativas de los ríos Ampiyacu, Apayacu y Medio Putumayo/Indigenous Communities of the Ampiyacu, Apayacu and Medio Putumayo rivers FECONA FECONAFROPU Instituto del Bien Común Servicio Holandés de Cooperación al Desarrollo/ SNV Netherlands Development Organization Centro de Conservación, Investigación y Manejo de Áreas Naturales (CIMA-Cordillera Azul) Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos LOS INVENTARIOS BIOLÓGICOS RÁPIDOS SON PUBLICADOS POR / Esta publicación ha sido financiada en parte por Gordon and RAPID BIOLOGICAL INVENTORIES REPORTS ARE PUBLISHED BY: Betty Moore Foundation./This publication has been funded in part by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. THE FIELD MUSEUM Environmental and Conservation Programs Cita Sugerida/Suggested Citation: Pitman, N., R. C. Smith, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive C. Vriesendorp, D. Moskovits, R. Piana, G. Knell & T. Wachter Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496 USA (eds.). 2004. Perú: Ampiyacu, Apayacu, Yaguas, Medio Putumayo. T 312.665.7430, F 312.665.7433 Rapid Biological Inventories Report 12. Chicago, Illinois: www.fieldmuseum.org The Field Museum. Créditos Fotográficos/Photography credits: Editores/Editors: Nigel Pitman, Richard Chase Smith, Corine Vriesendorp, Debra Moskovits, Renzo Piana, Carátula/Cover: Un padre Bora con sus hijos atienden un taller en Guillermo Knell, Tyana Wachter Boras de Brillo Nuevo. Foto de Alvaro del Campo./A Bora father and his children attend a workshop in Boras de Brillo Nuevo. -
Molecular Phylogenetic Relationships and Generic Placement of Dryaderces Inframaculata Boulenger, 1882 (Anura: Hylidae)
70 (3): 357 – 366 © Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, 2020. 2020 Molecular phylogenetic relationships and generic placement of Dryaderces inframaculata Boulenger, 1882 (Anura: Hylidae) Diego A. Ortiz 1, 4, *, Leandro J.C.L. Moraes 2, 3, *, Dante Pavan 3 & Fernanda P. Werneck 2 1 College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia — 2 Coordenação de Biodiversidade, Programa de Coleções Científicas Biológicas, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA), Manaus, AM, Brazil — 3 Ecosfera Consultoria e Pes- quisa em Meio Ambiente Ltda., São Paulo, SP, Brazil — 4 Corresponding author; email: [email protected] — * These authors con- tributed equally to this work Submitted January 4, 2020. Accepted July 9, 2020. Published online at www.senckenberg.de/vertebrate-zoology on July 31, 2020. Published in print Q3/2020. Editor in charge: Raffael Ernst Abstract Dryaderces inframaculata Boulenger, 1882, is a rare species known only from a few specimens and localities in the southeastern Amazonia rainforest. It was originally described in the genus Hyla, after ~ 130 years transferred to Osteocephalus, and more recently to Dryaderces. These taxonomic changes were based solely on the similarity of morphological characters. Herein, we investigate the phylogenetic re lationships and generic placement of D. inframaculata using molecular data from a collected specimen from the middle Tapajós River region, state of Pará, Brazil. Two mitochondrial DNA fragments (16S and COI) were assessed among representative species in the sub family Lophiohylinae (Anura: Hylidae) to reconstruct phylogenetic trees under Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood criteria. Our results corroborate the monophyly of Dryaderces and the generic placement of D. inframaculata with high support. -
Amazon Alive: a Decade of Discoveries 1999-2009
Amazon Alive! A decade of discovery 1999-2009 The Amazon is the planet’s largest rainforest and river basin. It supports countless thousands of species, as well as 30 million people. © Brent Stirton / Getty Images / WWF-UK © Brent Stirton / Getty Images The Amazon is the largest rainforest on Earth. It’s famed for its unrivalled biological diversity, with wildlife that includes jaguars, river dolphins, manatees, giant otters, capybaras, harpy eagles, anacondas and piranhas. The many unique habitats in this globally significant region conceal a wealth of hidden species, which scientists continue to discover at an incredible rate. Between 1999 and 2009, at least 1,200 new species of plants and vertebrates have been discovered in the Amazon biome (see page 6 for a map showing the extent of the region that this spans). The new species include 637 plants, 257 fish, 216 amphibians, 55 reptiles, 16 birds and 39 mammals. In addition, thousands of new invertebrate species have been uncovered. Owing to the sheer number of the latter, these are not covered in detail by this report. This report has tried to be comprehensive in its listing of new plants and vertebrates described from the Amazon biome in the last decade. But for the largest groups of life on Earth, such as invertebrates, such lists do not exist – so the number of new species presented here is no doubt an underestimate. Cover image: Ranitomeya benedicta, new poison frog species © Evan Twomey amazon alive! i a decade of discovery 1999-2009 1 Ahmed Djoghlaf, Executive Secretary, Foreword Convention on Biological Diversity The vital importance of the Amazon rainforest is very basic work on the natural history of the well known. -
Zootaxa 2215: 37–54 (2009) ISSN 1175-5326 (Print Edition) Article ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2009 · Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (Online Edition)
Zootaxa 2215: 37–54 (2009) ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ Article ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2009 · Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) A new species of Osteocephalus (Anura: Hylidae) from Amazonian Bolivia: first evidence of tree frog breeding in fruit capsules of the Brazil nut tree JIŘÍ MORAVEC1,6, JAMES APARICIO2, MARCELO GUERRERO-REINHARD3, GONZALO CALDERÓN3, KARL-HEINZ JUNGFER4 & VÁCLAV GVOŽDÍK1,5 1Department of Zoology, National Museum, 115 79 Praha 1, Czech Republic. E-mail: [email protected] 2Museo Nacional de Historia Natural – Colección Boliviana de Fauna, Casilla 8706, La Paz, Bolivia 3Universidad Amazónica de Pando, Av. 9 de Febrero No. 001, Cobija, Bolivia. E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] 4Institute of Integrated Sciences, Department of Biology, University of Koblenz-Landau, Universitätsstr. 1, 56070 Koblenz, Germany. E-mail: [email protected] 5Department of Vertebrate Evolutionary Biology and Genetics, Institute of Animal Physiology and Genetics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 277 21 Liběchov, Czech Republic. E-mail: [email protected] 6Corresponding author Abstract A new species of Osteocephalus is described from lowland Amazonia of the Departamento Pando, northern Bolivia. The new species is most similar to Osteocephalus planiceps but differs by its smaller size (SVL 47.8–51.3 mm in males, 47.7–63.3 mm in females), absence of vocal slits, lack of sexual dimorphism in dorsal tubercles, single distal subarticular tubercle on the fourth finger, absence of dark spots on flanks, and by bicoloured iris with fine dark reticulate to radiate lines. The new species inhabits terra firme rainforest, breeds in water-filled fruit capsules of the Brazil nut tree and has oophagous tadpoles. -
BIOTA COLOMBIANA ISSN Impreso 0124-5376 Volumen 20 · Número 1 · Enero-Junio De 2019 ISSN Digital 2539-200X DOI 10.21068/C001
BIOTA COLOMBIANA ISSN impreso 0124-5376 Volumen 20 · Número 1 · Enero-junio de 2019 ISSN digital 2539-200X DOI 10.21068/c001 Atropellamiento vial de fauna silvestre en la Troncal del Caribe Amaryllidaceae en Colombia Adiciones al inventario de copépodos de Colombia Nuevos registros de avispas en la región del Orinoco Herpetofauna de San José del Guaviare Escarabajos estercoleros en Aves en los páramos de Antioquia Oglán Alto, Ecuador y el complejo de Chingaza Biota Colombiana es una revista científica, periódica-semestral, Comité Directivo / Steering Committee que publica artículos originales y ensayos sobre la biodiversi- Brigitte L. G. Baptiste Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos dad de la región neotropical, con énfasis en Colombia y países Alexander von Humboldt vecinos, arbitrados mínimo por dos evaluadores externos. In- M. Gonzalo Andrade Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia cluye temas relativos a botánica, zoología, ecología, biología, Francisco A. Arias Isaza Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras limnología, conservación, manejo de recursos y uso de la bio- “José Benito Vives De Andréis” - Invemar diversidad. El envío de un manuscrito implica la declaración Charlotte Taylor Missouri Botanical Garden explícita por parte del (los) autor (es) de que este no ha sido previamente publicado, ni aceptado para su publicación en otra Editor / Editor revista u otro órgano de difusión científica. El proceso de arbi- Rodrigo Bernal Independiente traje tiene una duración mínima de tres a cuatro meses a partir Editor de artículos de datos / Data papers Editor de la recepción del artículo por parte de Biota Colombiana. To- Dairo Escobar Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos das las contribuciones son de la entera responsabilidad de sus Alexander von Humboldt autores y no del Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Bioló- Asistente editorial / Editorial assistant gicos Alexander von Humboldt, ni de la revista o sus editores. -
Pacaya-Samiria Reserve, Peru)
SURVEY OF A NEOTROPICAL ANURAN ASSEMBLAGE (PACAYA-SAMIRIA RESERVE, PERU) A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science By ERIC WOEBBE B.S., Wright State University, 2010 Wright State University 2017 WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL April 18, 2017 I HEREBY RECOMMEND THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER MY SUPERVISION BY Eric Woebbe ENTITLED Survey of a Neotropical anuran assemblage (Pacaya- Samiria Reserve, Peru) BE ACCEPTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF Master of Science. ___________________ Thomas P. Rooney, Ph.D. Thesis Director _____________________ David L. Goldstein, Ph.D. Chair, Department of Biological Sciences College of Science and Mathematics Committee on Final Examination ______________________ Thomas P. Rooney, Ph.D. ______________________ Lynn K. Hartzler, Ph.D. ______________________ Volker Bahn, Ph.D. ______________________ Robert E. W. Fyffe, Ph.D. Vice President for Research and Dean of the Graduate School ABSTRACT Woebbe, Eric. M.S., Department of Biological Sciences, Wright State University, 2017. Survey of a Neotropical anuran assemblage (Pacaya-Samiria Reserve, Peru). The Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve of Peru is one of the largest protected areas of the Amazon rainforest, yet it has hosted only a few studies of frogs and toads (anurans). The primary goals of my study are: 1) To conduct an inventory of the local anuran species, 2) to quantify richness among habitats, 3) to compare differences in beta diversity across a river versus a continuous landscape, and 4) to compare difference in body size between nocturnal and diurnal individuals. After eight weeks of daytime and nighttime surveys during the dry season, a total of 601 individuals were identified across 28 species and 6 families. -
English Contents
ENGLISH CONTENTS (for Color Plates, see pages 27–50) Participants ............................................................................ 174 Apéndices/Appendices (1) Geological Formations ....................................................... 296 Institutional Profiles ............................................................... 178 (2) Water Samples ................................................................... 300 Acknowledgments ................................................................... 182 (3) Vascular Plants .................................................................. 304 Mission and Approach ............................................................ 186 (4) Fish Sampling Stations ....................................................... 330 (5) Fishes ................................................................................ 332 Report at a Glance .................................................................. 187 (6) Amphibians and Reptiles ................................................... 346 Why Ere-Campuya-Algodón?.................................................... 198 (7) Birds ................................................................................. 362 Conservation Targets .............................................................. 199 (8) Large and Medium-sized Mammals ................................... 374 Assets and Opportunities ........................................................ 202 (9) Commonly Used Plants ..................................................... -
Establecimiento De Un Protocolo De Reproducción Ex-Situ De Dendropsophus Labialis Como Estrategia De Manejo Para Su Uso Y Conservación
Universidad de La Salle Ciencia Unisalle Zootecnia Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias 2011 Establecimiento de un protocolo de reproducción ex-situ de Dendropsophus labialis como estrategia de manejo para su uso y conservación Oscar Mauricio Ostos Rodrigez Universidad de La Salle, Bogotá Juan David Ayala Palma Universidad de La Salle, Bogotá Follow this and additional works at: https://ciencia.lasalle.edu.co/zootecnia Part of the Other Animal Sciences Commons Citación recomendada Ostos Rodrigez, O. M., & Ayala Palma, J. D. (2011). Establecimiento de un protocolo de reproducción ex- situ de Dendropsophus labialis como estrategia de manejo para su uso y conservación. Retrieved from https://ciencia.lasalle.edu.co/zootecnia/304 This Trabajo de grado - Pregrado is brought to you for free and open access by the Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias at Ciencia Unisalle. It has been accepted for inclusion in Zootecnia by an authorized administrator of Ciencia Unisalle. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ESTABLECIMIENTO DE UN PROTOCOLO DE REPRODUCCION EX-SITU DE Dendropsophus labialis COMO ESTRATEGIA DE MANEJO PARA SU USO Y CONSERVACION OSCAR MAURICIO OSTOS RODRIGUEZ JUAN DAVID AYALA PALMA UNIVERSIDAD DE LA SALLE FACULTAD DE ZOOTECNIA BOGOTA 2011 ESTABLECIMIENTO DE UN PROTOCOLO DE REPRODUCCION EX-SITU DE Dendropsophus labialis COMO ESTRATEGIA DE MANEJO PARA SU USO Y CONSERVACION TRABAJO DE GRADO OSCAR MAURICIO OSTOS RODRIGUEZ JUAN DAVID AYALA PALMA DIRECTOR IVAN LOZANO ORTEGA ZOOTECNISTA Esp. Dipl. UNIVERSIDAD DE LA SALLE UNIVERSIDAD DE LA SALLE FACULTAD DE ZOOTECNIA BOGOTA, D.C 2011 2 DIRECTIVAS HERMANO CARLOS GABRIEL GÓMEZ RESTREPO F.S.C RECTOR HERMANO FABIO CORONADO PADILLA F.S.C. -
Systematics of the Osteocephalus Buckleyi Species Complex
A peer-reviewed open-access journal ZooKeys 229: 1–52 (2012) Systematics of the Osteocephalus buckleyi species complex... 1 doi: 10.3897/zookeys.229.3580 RESEARCH ARTICLE www.zookeys.org Launched to accelerate biodiversity research Systematics of the Osteocephalus buckleyi species complex (Anura, Hylidae) from Ecuador and Peru Santiago R. Ron1,†, Pablo J. Venegas2,‡, Eduardo Toral1,3,§, Morley Read1,|, Diego A. Ortiz1,¶, Andrea L. Manzano1,4,# 1 Museo de Zoología, Escuela de Biología, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, Av. 12 de Octubre y Roca, Aptdo. 17-01-2184, Quito, Ecuador 2 División de Herpetología-Centro de Ornitología y Biodiversidad (CORBIDI), Santa Rita N˚105 Of. 202, Urb. Huertos de San Antonio, Surco, Lima, Perú 3 Current address: Facultad de Ciencias Ambientales, Universidad Internacional SEK, Quito, Ecuador 4 Current address: Biology Department, HH227, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132, USA † urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:ACF9C463-F771-459C-B22B-AF6B9902DF57 ‡ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:15AD03E1-9ACF-4F38-AA96-09A5A56A3DC4 § urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:1A4F31AF-5629-4EE5-83DD-1EBB93139A5B | urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:10D75453-75A0-49C7-B577-A7687398CEF0 ¶ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:51147772-F315-412E-BA89-B8990CA49544 # urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:7C29ADA6-00FB-45DC-9A5B-7B9A217B71F6 Corresponding author: Santiago R. Ron ([email protected]) Academic editor: F. Andreone | Received 24 June 2012 | Accepted 5 October 2012 | Published 18 October 2012 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:163872F0-BE66-436C-9663-EE2226C358AB Citation: Ron SR, Venegas PJ, Toral E, Read M, Ortiz DA, Manzano AL (2012) Systematics of the Osteocephalus buckleyi species complex (Anura, Hylidae) from Ecuador and Peru. -
Five New Country Records of Amazonian Anurans for Brazil, with Notes on Morphology, Advertisement Calls, and Natural History
Herpetology Notes, volume 12: 211-219 (2019) (published online on 17 January 2019) Five new country records of Amazonian anurans for Brazil, with notes on morphology, advertisement calls, and natural history Pedro Ivo Simões1,*, Fernando J. M. Rojas-Runjaic1,2, Giussepe Gagliardi-Urrutia1, and Santiago Castroviejo-Fisher1,3 Abstract. We report for the first time the occurrences in Brazil of Boana hobbsi, Osteocephalus deridens and Tepuihyla shushupe (Hylidae), and confirm the occurrences of Ranitomeya defleri and Ranitomeya variabilis (Dendrobatidae) referring voucher specimens obtained from an expedition to Estação Ecológica Juami-Japurá, state of Amazonas, Brazil, in February 2017. Additionally, we provide data on morphology of voucher specimens, advertisement calls, field observations and geographic distribution of these species. We also describe the external morphology of the female R. defleri, which was previously unknown to science. Keywords. Amazon, Amphibia, conservation units, Dendrobatidae, Hylidae, Japurá River Introduction complexes (e.g., Gehara et al., 2014; Ferrão et al., 2016; Rojas et al., 2018). A second source of discoveries of Brazil houses the greatest diversity of amphibian Amazonian species are expeditions to poorly sampled species in the world, with current estimates surpassing areas. Recent fieldwork in relict mountain landscapes a thousand species (Segalla et al., 2016). However, in the northern reaches of Roraima and Amazonas, for early assessments in the 21th century correctly assumed example, uncovered at least seven amphibian species amphibian species richness in Brazilian Amazonia to be severely underestimated, as the number of species unknown to science, additional species with taxonomic known to occur in the region at that time ranged between uncertainties and new geographic records (Moraes et ca. -
Systematic Review of the Frog Family Hylidae, with Special Reference to Hylinae: Phylogenetic Analysis and Taxonomic Revision
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE FROG FAMILY HYLIDAE, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO HYLINAE: PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS AND TAXONOMIC REVISION JULIAÂ N FAIVOVICH Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Herpetology), American Museum of Natural History Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology (E3B) Columbia University, New York, NY ([email protected]) CEÂ LIO F.B. HADDAD Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de BiocieÃncias, Unversidade Estadual Paulista, C.P. 199 13506-900 Rio Claro, SaÄo Paulo, Brazil ([email protected]) PAULO C.A. GARCIA Universidade de Mogi das Cruzes, AÂ rea de CieÃncias da SauÂde Curso de Biologia, Rua CaÃndido Xavier de Almeida e Souza 200 08780-911 Mogi das Cruzes, SaÄo Paulo, Brazil and Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de SaÄo Paulo, SaÄo Paulo, Brazil ([email protected]) DARREL R. FROST Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Herpetology), American Museum of Natural History ([email protected]) JONATHAN A. CAMPBELL Department of Biology, The University of Texas at Arlington Arlington, Texas 76019 ([email protected]) WARD C. WHEELER Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History ([email protected]) BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY CENTRAL PARK WEST AT 79TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10024 Number 294, 240 pp., 16 ®gures, 2 tables, 5 appendices Issued June 24, 2005 Copyright q American Museum of Natural History 2005 ISSN 0003-0090 CONTENTS Abstract ....................................................................... 6 Resumo ....................................................................... -
12 RAPID BIOLOGICAL INVENTORIES INFORME/REPORT NO.12 Instituto Del Bien Común SNV Netherlands Development Organization (SNV-Perú)
biological R Rapid Biological Inventories apid Biological Inventories : 12 rapid inventories 12 Instituciones y Comunidades Participantes / Participating Institutions and Communities Perú: Ampiyacu, The Field Museum Perú: Ampiyacu, Apayacu, Medio Putumayo Yaguas, Apayacu, Yaguas, Comunidades Nativas de los ríos Ampiyacu, Apayacu y Medio Putumayo/Indigenous Communities of the Ampiyacu, Medio Putumayo Apayacu, and Medio Putumayo rivers Instituto del Bien Común Servicio Holandés de Cooperación al Desarrollo/ SNV Netherlands Development Organization Centro de Conservación, Investigación y Manejo de Áreas Naturales (CIMA-Cordillera Azul) Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos Financiado por / Partial funding by Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation The Field Museum Environmental & Conservation Programs 1400 South Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496, USA T 312.665.7430 F 312.665.7433 www.fieldmuseum.org/rbi THE FIELD MUSEUM Bosque de tierra firme/Terra firme forest PERÚ Purma/Even-aged secondary forest Ampiyacu, Apayacu, Yaguas, Pantanos con aguaje/Swamps with Mauritia palms Áreas urbanas/Urban areas Medio Putumayo (AAYMP) Zona Reservada propuesta/Proposed Reserved Zone Campamentos/Camps fig.2 La región del Ampiyacu, Apayacu, Yaguas y Medio Putumayo está dominada por extensos bosques de tierra firme en colinas bajas, Comunidades indígenas/Native communities: con algunos parches de bosque pantanoso o de planicie aluvial. En esta – Cuenca del Putumayo /Putumayo valley FECONAFROPU: 1 Puerto Elvira, 2 Puerto