4.5 Article

The Pristimantis trachyblepharis species group, a clade of miniaturized frogs: description of four new species and insights into the evolution of body size in the genus

Journal

ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 195, Issue 1, Pages 315-354

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab044

Keywords

Amphibia; Andes; Anura; biogeography; cryptic species; Linnean shortfall; miniaturization; morphometrics; Neotropics; phylogenetics

Categories

Funding

  1. Secretaria Nacional de Educacion Superior, Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion del Ecuador SENESCYT
  2. PUCE-DGA

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This study reveals that the Pristimantis trachyblepharis species group consists of nine species, with four being newly discovered. Among them, Pristimantis nanus is currently known as the smallest species in the genus and the smallest vertebrate in Ecuador. The research also investigates the evolutionary origins and implications of body-size reduction in Pristimantis.
Species richness in the genus Pristimantis is underestimated due to the existence of morphologically cryptic species. This is worsened by the low sampling effort and the lack of studies using genetic markers. Here, we use molecular and morphological data to determine the phylogenetic relationships of a clade of Pristimantis distributed throughout montane tropical forests in the eastern Andes, from central Ecuador to northern Peru. We name this clade the Pristimantis trachyblepharis species group. Our results show that it comprises nine species, of which four are formally described and five are new. Four of these undescribed species are formally described here. The group is composed of miniaturized species, such as Pristimantis nanus sp. nov., currently the smallest known species of the genus and the smallest vertebrate in Ecuador. As a first approach to understanding the evolutionary origin and implications of body-size reduction in Pristimantis, we here study the phylogenetic signal and evolutionary trends of body size within the genus. We also provide the first record of P. aquilonaris in Ecuador and we show, for the first time, the phylogenetic position of P. albujai, P. aquilonaris, P. minimus and P. trachyblepharis, which are also members of the P. trachyblepharis species group.

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