New
locality records of Rhacophorus lateralis Boulenger,
1883 (Amphibia: Anura: Rhacophoridae), in Western Ghats, India
K.P. Dinesh1, C.
Radhakrishnan2, K.V. Gururaja3 & Anil Zacariya4
1,2 Western Ghat Regional Centre,
Zoological Survey of India, Kozhikode, Kerala 673006, India
3 Centrefor Infrastructure, Sustainable Transportation and Urban Planning (CiSTUP),
Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560012, India
4 ‘Beagle’ Chandhkunnu, Kalpetta,
Wyanad, Kerala 673121, India
Email: 1 dineshcafe@gmail.com
Date of publication (online): 26 June 2010
Date of publication (print): 26 June 2010
ISSN 0974-7907 (online) | 0974-7893 (print)
Editor: R.J. Ranjit Daniels
Manuscript details:
Ms
# o2209
Received
19 May 2009
Final
received 27 May 2009
Finally
accepted 29 May 2010
Citation: Dinesh, K.P., C. Radhakrishnan, K.V. Gururaja & A. Zacariya
(2010). New locality records of Rhacophorus
lateralis Boulenger, 1883 (Amphibia: Anura: Rhacophoridae), in
Western Ghats, India. Journal of Threatened Taxa 2(6): 986-989.
Copyright: © K.P. Dinesh, C. Radhakrishnan, K.V.
Gururaja & Anil Zacariya 2010. Creative Commons
Attribution 3.0 Unported License. JoTT allows unrestricted use of this
article in any medium for non-profit purposes, reproduction and distribution by
providing adequate credit to the authors and the source of publication.
Acknowledgements: The authors are grateful to Dr. Ramakrishna, Director, Zoological
Survey of India, Kolkata for facilities and
encouragement. We thank the anonymous referees and Sanjay Molur for the
valuable suggestions and critical comments on the manuscript.
For Figure, Images & Tables - - click here
Rhacophorus lateralis was described by Boulenger (1883)
based on a single specimen (BM 82.2.10.75) from “Malabar” deposited at the
British Museum. No further
collections were available until Daniel Bennet and his team’s rediscovery of
the species from Coorg (Das 2000), Karnataka (ZSI A9071 and ZSI A9072). Das (2000) also removed the species
from provisional synonymy with Rhacophorus malabaricus proposed by Wolf (1936).
Biju (2000) stated that Anil
Zacariya (the fourth author of this account) located this species in 1980 from
Kalpetta, Wyanad, Kerala and that subsequently in 1981 S.D. Biju observed 28
individuals of R. lateralis from Kalpetta. This
species of tree frog was considered to be very rare, documented from Wyanad
(Biju 2000) and Periyar Tiger Reserve (Easa 2003; Daniels 2005). In 2004, the IUCN assessed this species
as Endangered and considered its range to be restricted to two small areas of
Wyanad and Coorg in southern Western Ghats of India (Biju et al. 2004). Recently Biju (2009) and Goel &
Goel (2010) reported natural history studies in this species. Molur & Molur (2010) reported this
species from Shanthi Estate, Coorg.
On 04 March 1995, the second author
observed a transforming young one (metamorph) of this species from the Shola
forest patches of Eravikulam National Park, Kerala (10012’56’’N
& 77002’14’’E). On
13 April 2005, during a survey in Wyanad, Kerala, the fourth author collected
two specimens of the species from a coffee plantation at Kalpetta (11034’57’’N
& 75059’34’’E; ZSI/WGFRS/V/A 627a & b). On 12 August 2006, the first author
located five individuals of this species and collected one of them from a
coffee plantation at Bygoor, (13018’59’’N & 75036’58’’E)
(V/A 667) Chikkamagaluru, Karnataka and on 14 August 2007 the first author saw
four individuals and collected one representative specimen from Balehonnur (13018’03’’N
& 75027’01’’E; V/A 678; Image 1a); both the localities are
adjacent to Bhadra Tiger Reserve, Karnataka. On 25 July 2008 the third author located a few individuals
of the species from a coffee plantation at Haramakki Estate, Kalasa (13018’02’’N
& 75021’10’’E; Image 1b), adjacent to the Kudremukh National
Park, Karnataka. However, no specimens were collected.
We determined the identity of the
four individuals collected (Table 1) as R. lateralis based on the following diagnostic features assigned to the taxon
by Boulenger (1890) and Das (2000): habitus slender; head short, broader than
long; snout short, obtusely pointed, projecting beyond mouth; canthus rostralis
distinct; loreal region slightly concave; vomerine teeth in two small oblique
series between the choanae; nostrils nearer to the tip of the snout than to the
eye; interorbital space broader than the upper eyelid; eyes large; tympanum
half the diameter of the eye; a supratympanic fold distinct; fingers and toes
with enlarged disc possessing circummarginal grooves; fingers and toes with
dermal fringes and more than half webbed; subarticular tubercles not very
prominent; a fold of the skin bordering the forelimb anteriorly (Image 2);
tibiotarsal articulation reaching the tip of the snout; dorsum smooth, belly
granular; a prominent dorsolateral yellow streak on each side from the nostril
to the groin along the outer edge of the upper eyelid.
A wide range of colour variation
was noticed in the specimens collected and in individuals observed in the field
(Image 1a and 1b). Both Boulenger
(1890) and Das (2000) do not mention the variations in colour pattern in the
species. Colour changes in this
species are well recorded by Bennet et al. (2000), theyattributed colour change to stress and Molur & Molur (2010) found that the
frequency and rapidity of colour change reduced after the individuals were
handled repeatedly.
We noticed two colour morphs within
the species, one morph with a dominantly green dorsum and the other with a
brown dorsum with a mixture of varying shades of green. Our field observations confirmed that
individuals of the species tend to change their body colour from time to
time. Individuals with the green
dorsum have the green colour interspersed with fine sky blue spots; a distinct
metallic yellow lateral stripe running from the eye to the groin; a clear sky
blue coloured line bordering either side of the yellow stripe; hind arm,
lateral sides and ventral sides of the thigh with fleshy red to dark red
colouration; fore arm and dorsal surface of the hind legs striped with broad
green and narrow blue bands. The
individuals with brown dorsum have darker brown spots; no demarcating blue line
bordering the yellow stripe from the eye to the groin; entire hind arm, lateral
sides and ventral sides of the thigh, transparent; fore arm and dorsal surface
of the hind legs striped with broad yellowish-green to brownish-green and
narrow dark brown or black bands. Notably, the one individual collected and thefew individuals sighted in the field had the prominent spur in front of the
joint of the hind arm and the forearm. We observed a post-metamorphic froglet (Image 3), which was green in
colour with black spots over the dorsum and along the sides of the body having
only the limbs barred without any distinctive dorsolateral yellow streak from
the nostril to the groin along the outer edge of the upper eyelid.
In Wyanad, Bhadra Tiger Reserve and
Kudremukh National Park, we noticed R. lateralis in association with R. malabaricus in the coffee plantations. Interestingly Molur & Molur (2010)
and Goel & Goel (2010) noted the association of this species with R. malabaricus in Coorg area of coffee plantation
and organic spice farm respectively. The species is being reported here for the first time from the
surroundings of Bhadra Tiger Reserve and Kudremukh National Park, earlier record
being Coorg in the central Western Ghats. Our report extends the range of the species further about 75km (aerial
distance) towards the north from Mojo Plantations, Coorg (Goel & Goel 2010)
in the Western Ghats. It appears
that the species probably has wider distribution than what was known to us so
far in the Western Ghats (Fig. 1).
References
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