Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Articles
Published: 2011-09-15
Page range: 39-51
Abstract views: 40
PDF downloaded: 19

Two new frog species (Microhylidae: Cophixalus) from boulder habitats on Cape York Peninsula, north-east Australia

Division of Evolution, Ecology & Genetics, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia New address: School of Marine & Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland 4811, Australia
Queensland Museum, PO Box 3300, South Bank, Brisbane, Queensland 4101, Australia
Amphibia Cophixalus kulakula Cophixalus pakayakulangun boulder granite

Abstract

Australia has a highly localised but diverse radiation of microhylid frogs. 18 species are described from north-east Queensland (14 Cophixalus and 4 Austrochaperina), most with highly localised montane distributions. While most species are small (10-25 mm) rainforest species, two differ dramatically in ecology and morphology. Cophixalus saxatilis and C. zweifeli inhabit isolated areas of jumbled boulder-pile habitat and are considerably larger than all other species (30-45 mm). Here we describe two new species of large, boulder dwelling Cophixalus from the Pascoe River region of Cape York Peninsula. Cophixalus kulakula sp. nov. occurs in piled boulder habitat amongst rainforest in the Tozer Range area, while Cophixalus pakayakulangun sp. nov. occurs in similar habitat in the Kennedy Hills region north of the Pascoe River. These are the most northerly sites for Cophixalus in Australia and both occur in rainforest areas not occupied by other species of Cophixalus. Both species are large (snout-vent length > 40 mm) and of similar morphology to the other two boulder-dwelling species. Cophixalus kulakula sp. nov. and C. pakayakulangun sp. nov. differ from each other and from all other described Cophixalus genetically and in aspects of colour pattern and morphology. The call of C. kulakula sp. nov. is also unique, but the call of C. pakayakulangun sp. nov. remains unknown. The two new species are each others closest relatives (albeit with approximately 8% genetic divergence for 12S and 16S mtDNA) and are allied to C. ornatus. The diet of both species consists primarily of ants. Both species have highly localised distributions but are abundant within these and are probably secure.

References

  1. Boettger, O. (1892) Katalog der Batrachier-Sammlung im Museum der Senckenbergischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft in Frankfurt-am-Main. Knauer, Frankfurt-am-Main, 73 pp.

    Couper, P.J. & Hoskin, C.J. (2008) Litho-refugia: the importance of rock landscapes for the long-term persistence of Australian rainforest fauna. Australian Zoologist, 34(4), 554–60.

    Covacevich, J. & Ingram, G.J. (1978) An undescribed species of rock dwelling Cryptoblepharus (Lacertilia: Scincidae). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 18, 151–154.

    Davies, M. & McDonald, K.R. (1998) A new species of frog (Anura: Microhylidae) from Cape Melville, Queensland. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 122(4), 159–165.

    Felton, A., Alford, R.A., Felton, A.M. & Schwarzkopf, L. (2006) Multiple mate choice criteria and the importance of age for male mating success in the microhylid frog, Cophixalus ornatus. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 59, 786–795.

    Fry, D.B. (1912) Description of Austrochaperina, a new genus of Engystomatidae from north Australia. Records of the Australian Museum, 9, 87–106.

    Hoskin, C.J. (2004) Australian microhylid frogs (Cophixalus and Austrochaperina): phylogeny, taxonomy, calls, distributions and breeding biology. Australian Journal of Zoology, 52, 237–269.

    Hoskin, C.J. (2008) A key to the microhylid frogs of Australia, and new distributional data. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 52(2), 233–237.

    Hoskin, C.J. & Hero, J-M. (2008) Rainforest Frogs of the Wet Tropics, north-east Australia. Griffith University, Gold Coast, 96 pp.

    Hoskin, C.J., James, S. & Grigg, G.C. (2009) Ecology and taxonomy-driven deviations in the frog call-body size relationship across the diverse Australian frog fauna. Journal of Zoology, 278, 36–41.

    Ingram, G.J. (1978) A new species of gecko, genus Cyrtodactylus, from Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, Australia. Victorian Naturalist, 95, 143–146.

    Ingram, G.J. & Covacevich, J. (1980) Two new lygosomine skinks endemic to Cape York Peninsula. In: Stevens, N.C. & Bailey, A. (Eds), Contemporary Cape York. Royal Society of Queensland, Brisbane, pp. 45–48.

    McDonald, K.R. (1997) A new stream-dwelling Litoria from the Melville Range, Queensland, Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 42, 307–309.

    Moritz, C., Patton, J.L., Schneider, C.J. & Smith, T.B. (2000) Diversification of rainforest faunas: an integrated molecular approach. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 31, 533–563.

    Richards, S.J., Dennis, A.J., Trenerry, M.P. & Werren, G.L. (1994) A new species of Cophixalus (Anura: Microhylidae) from northern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 37, 307–310.

    Swofford, D.L. (2003) PAUP*: phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (* and other methods), version 4. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland (Massachusetts).

    Tyler, M.J. (1979) A new species of Cophixalus (Anura: Microhylidae) from Queensland, Australia. Copeia, 1979(1), 118–121.

    Williams, Y.M., Williams, S.E., Alford, R.A., Waycott, M. & Johnson, C. (2006) Niche breadth and geographical range: ecological compensation for geographical rarity in rainforest frogs. Biology Letters, 2, 532–535.

    Zweifel, R.G. (1985) Australian frogs of the family Microhylidae. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 182(3), 265–388.

    Zweifel, R.G. (2000) Partition of the Australopapuan microhylid frog genus Sphenophryne with descriptions of new species. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 253, 9–10.

    Zweifel, R.G. & Parker, F. (1969) A new species of microhylid frog (genus Cophixalus) from Australia. American Museum Novitates, 2390, 1–10.

    Zweifel, R.G. & Parker, F. (1977) A new species of frog from Australia (Microhylidae: Cophixalus). American Museum Novitates, 2614, 1–10.