7.1 Incentivos para publicaciones indizadas
URI permanente para esta colección
Examinar
Examinando 7.1 Incentivos para publicaciones indizadas por Autor "rp00592"
Resultados por página
Opciones de clasificación
-
PublicaciónA NEW SPECIES OF TELMATOBIUS WIEGMANN, 1834, FROM THE EASTERN CORDILLERA CENTRAL OF THE ANDES, PERU. (ANURA: TELMATOBIIDAE), WITH DESCRIPTION OF ITS TADPOLE, AND RANGE EXTENSION OF T. MENDELSONI DE LA RIVA ET AL., 2012(Carnegie Museum of Natural History, 2016)
;Ttito, A ;Landauro, CZ ;Venegas, PJ ;De la Riva, IChaparro, JCWe describe adult specimens and tadpoles of a new species of Telmatobius Wiegmann, 1834, Telmatobius mantaro, from the central Cordillera of the Andes in Peru. Specimens were collected in humid lower montane forests and dry lower montane forests between 2240–3170 m elevation at the northern parts of the Departments of Huancavelica and Ayacucho. We also report a range extension of 262 km west of the type locality for Telmatobius mendelsoni De la Riva et al., 2012, which was found in sympatry with T. mantaro in Ayacucho. The new species has a snout–vent length of 48.9–55.8 mm in three adult males, and both sexes have tympanic membrane differentiated and tympanic annulus visible, a feature that distinguishes the new species from the majority of other Peruvian Telmatobius. We propose to assign the IUCN category Critically Endangered to this species because of its small area of distribution and its high likelihood of being infected by Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis. -
PublicaciónParental care and altitudinal range extension of the endemic frog Bryophryne gymnotis (Anura: Craugastoridae) in the Andes of southeastern Peru(ESALQ Universidade de Sao Paolo, 2017)
;Mamani, L ;Diaz, MI ;Ttito, JW ;Condori, FPTtito, AAmphibians have developed different strategies to protect eggs, tadpoles, and froglets. Seven modes of parental care are known: egg attendance, egg transport, tadpole attendance, tadpole transport, tadpole feeding, internal gestation, and froglet transport. Brachycephaloidea (Terrarana) includes 1073 species f which are known to provide parental care. In Peru, seven species of Craugastoridae are known to exhibit parental care, including Bryophryne cophites, Lynchius oblitus Motta, Chaparro, Pombal, Guayasamin, De la Riva, and Padial, 2016.