Comparative morphology of pond, stream and phytotelm-dwelling tadpoles of the South American Redbelly Toads (Anura: Bufonidae: Melanophryniscus)
Share
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor(s)
Baldo, Diego; Vera Candioti, Florencia; Haad, Belén; Kolenc, Francisco; Borteiro, Claudio; Pereyra, Martín O.; Zank, Caroline; Colombo, Patrick; Bornschein, Marcos R.; Netto Sisa, Flavia
; Brusquetti Estrada, Francisco Adolfo
; Conte, Carlos E.; Nogueira Costa, Paulo; Almeida Santos, Patricia; Pie, Marcio R.
Date of publishing
2014-06-16Type of publication
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleSubject(s)
Amphibian
Buccal cavity
Chondrocranium
Cranial muscles
Hyobranchial skeleton
Lentic tadpoles
Lotic tadpoles
Phytotelm tadpoles
South America
Buccal cavity
Chondrocranium
Cranial muscles
Hyobranchial skeleton
Lentic tadpoles
Lotic tadpoles
Phytotelm tadpoles
South America
Abstract
We present a comprehensive review of larval morphology in the Neotropical toad genus Melanophryniscus. The taxa studied included 23 species with representatives of recognized phenetic groups and different larval ecomorphological guilds: pond, stream, and phytotelm-dwelling tadpoles. Their external morphology variation is congruent with current phenetic arrangement based on adult features, but also reflects the habitat where larvae develop. Lotic tadpoles (i.e. M. tumifrons group and M. krauczuki) in general exhibit a more depressed body, a longer tail with lower fins, and larger oral discs than lentic forms (i.e. M. stelzneri group, M. moreirae, M. sanmartini, and M. langonei). Despite their peculiar, confined microhabitat, phytotelm larvae do not diverge markedly from non-arboreal species. The distinctive features of all species are the presence of a pineal end organ and the placement of the intestinal reversal point at the left of the abdomen in typical larval stages. The buccal cavity and musculoskeletal anatomy are quite conserved between species, yet some characteristics differ from those of other bufonids. The presence of one pair of subhyoid muscles is apparently an exclusive trait of Melanophryniscus among Bufonidae.





