0000000000337316
AUTHOR
Alain Dubois
Out of Asia: Mitochondrial DNA Evidence for an Oriental Origin of Tiger Frogs, Genus Hoplobatrachus
Most examples of intercontinental dispersal events after the Miocene contact between Africa and Asia involve mammal lineages. Among amphibians, a number of probably related groups are known from both continents, but their phylogenies are so far largely unresolved. To test the hypothesis of Miocene dispersal against a Mesozoic vicariance scenario in the context of Gondwana fragmentation, we analyzed fragments of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene (572 bp) in 40 specimens of 34 species of the anuran family Ranidae. Results corroborated the monophyly of tiger frogs (genus Hoplobatrachus), a genus with representatives in Africa and Asia. The African H. occipitalis was the sister group of the Asian…
The taxonomic impediment:A shortage of taxonomists, not the lack of technical approaches
A case of possible vocal convergence between frogs and a bird in Himalayan torrents
Several species of frogs of the subgenusRana (Paa) and one species of bird of the genusPhylloscopus, which are calling in or near torrents in the Himalayas, show striking similarities in their vocal signals: 1) The calls are composed of short sequences of notes separated by periods of silence; 2) the notes are pure, short, and have a narrow frequency band; 3) within each sequence, the notes are rhythmically emitted. We suggest that these characteristics may be adaptive, the convergence being caused by the selective pressure of the acoustic constraints of the biotope.