Badan Riset dan Inovasi Nasional
07-11-2022
12-08-2024
7e466dce-a79f-4f48-a708-0ebe313c20d5
By examining mitochondrial DNA phylogeny using 2424bp of sequence data 12S rRNA,...
A new megophryid species of Leptobrachium is described on the basis of three spe...
Four species of endemic Leptobrachium are known from Borneo, two lowland species...
A rhacophorid tree frog from Sumatra that was once identifed as Polypedates otil...
Three species of the genus Sarax are recognized in the Papuan region. Among them...
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Detection of Cryptic Taxa in Leptobrachium nigrops (Amphibia, Anura, Megophryidae), with Description of Two New Species
We evaluated taxonomic relationships among allopatric populations of Leptobrachium nigrops Berry & Hendrickson from Malay Peninsula, Singapore, Indonesia (Belitung), and Borneo (Sarawak). Phylogenetic relationships estimated from the sequence data of mitochondrial 12S RNA, tRNAval, and 16S rRNA genes, and nuclear NCX1 and SLC8A genes revealed presence of three distinct clades within L. nigrops: (1) true L. nigrops clade from Singapore and Malay Peninsula, (2) clade from Belitung, Indonesia and coastal area of Sarawak, Borneo, and (3) clade from Kanowit, Sarawak, an inland area of Borneo. Each of these three genetic clades is considered to represent distinct species because they are genetically highly divergent and morphologically distinguishable. We therefore describe the populations from Belitung and coastal area of Sarawak as L. ingeri sp. nov and the population from the inland area of Sarawak as L. kanowitense sp. nov. Ancestral L. kanowitense seems to have invaded Borneo Island much earlier than ancestral L. ingeri, whose dispersion occurred during the Pleistocene glacial periods. Zootaxa, Vol. 3398. Hal. 22-39 ISSN 1175-5326