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Description

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Pseudophilautus semiruber is an extremely small frog with a stout body. The skin is smooth on the entire body (flanks, dorsum, and venter), with the exception of a mid-dorsum dermal ridge running from back of the head to the vent. The head is convex laterally, and the snout is oval viewed from either the top or the side. The skin on the head is not co-ossified. The space between the eyes is concave, while the area between the nostrils is flat. The nostrils themselves are oval in shape. The pupil of P. semiruber, which runs horizontally, is oval as well. The tympana are distinctly oval and vertical. The tongue is elongate with no lingual papilla. No vomerine ridges are present. A very weakly defined supratympanic fold is present. The forelimbs are short and slender. The fingers are slender as well with relative length (from shortest to longest) I, II, IV, III. The fingertips have discs with circumarginal grooves. The hands have rudimentary webbing, with no dermal fringes. The dorso-lateral fold is absent. The rear limbs and digits are slender, with relative toe length (from shortest to longest) of I, II, V, III, IV (Meegaskumbura et al. 2011). P. semiruber can be distinguished from its close relatives by its small size when adult (12-13.4 mm snout-vent length), rounded canthal edges, distinct tympanum, lack of a vomerine ridge, weakly defined supratympanic fold, and smooth skin on its underside (Meegaskumbura et al. 2011). Coloration: In life, P. semiruber is generally a gray-brown color when viewed from above. The front half of the head is ashy brown. The face and lips are ash-colored. The area from the interorbital region through the back of the dorsum is gray. The flanks are ash-brown with occasional white patches outlined in red. The mid-dorsal ridge is red. The upper portions of the arms, thighs, and feet are red, with darkened crossbars on the hind limbs. The undersides of the thighs are an orange-red, with white patches. The throat is ashy-brown with white patches while the chest and belly are reddish brown with white patches. When preserved in ethanol, the gray and ash-brown colors appear as a dark brown. The white patches become yellowish, and all red coloration fades to brown. The mid-dorsal ridge appears pale brown (Meegaskumbura et al. 2011).P. semiruber was first described as Ixalus semiruber in 1913 by Annandale, but had not been seen in nearly 100 years until its rediscovery and re-analysis by Meegaskambura et al. (2011) in the early twenty-first century. The holotype (ZSIC 17401) had been lost, but the 1913 drawings and descriptions were sufficient to identify the species. P. semiruber is most closely related to P. simba (4% different in 16s mtDNA sequences), which is slightly larger (12.6-15.6 mm SVL in P. simba vs. 12-13.4 mm SVL in P. semiruber). There is one other diminutive Pseudophilautus species, P. tanu (13.5-13.9 mm SVL), which is more distantly related than P. simba, and is a nocturnal shrub dweller while both P. semiruber and P. simba are diurnal and inhabit the leaf litter (Meegaskumbura et al. 2011).

Reference

Meegaskumbura, M., Manamendra-Arachchi, K., Bowatte, G., and Meegaskumbura, S. (2012). ''Rediscovery of Pseudophilautus semiruber, a diminutive shrub frog (Rhacophoridae: Pseudophilautus) from Sri Lanka.'' Zootaxa, 3229, 58-68.

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Distribution and Habitat

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P. semiruber inhabits the montane forest of the area around Pattipola and Agra-Bopath in Sri Lanka. The elevation of this region is around 1800 m (Agra-Bopath 1750 m, Pattipola 1829 m) above sea level. P. semiruber inhabits the shaded leaf litter on the forest floor (Meegaskumbura et al. 2011).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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P. semiruber is diurnal and inhabits the leaf litter on the forest floor (as opposed to the shrubbery inhabited by many members of the genus) (Meegaskumbura et al. 2011).
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Pseudophilautus semiruber

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Pseudophilautus semiruber, known as Annandale's shrub frog, is a species of frog in the family Rhacophoridae that is endemic to Sri Lanka.[2]

Pseudophilautus semiruber is one of the smallest frog species in Sri Lanka and it is also one of the world's smallest frogs, measuring less than 15 mm in snout-to-vent length (diminutive species). A single specimen of this species was first discovered in 1911 and described by Annandale in 1913, referring to it as Ixalus semiruber. For the next 95 years since 1913, this species was not again seen alive, and the type specimen on which the original description was made, was confirmed to be lost from a Museum collection by 2001.[3]

Extensive field research conducted by Madhava Meegaskumbura in 2005, targeting molecular characterization of the Sri Lankan shrub frog species, lead to the re-discovery of this species from near a small forest reserve (Agra-Bopath) close to the Horton Plains National Park, Sri Lanka.

Description

Snout to vent length 12–13.4 mm. Body stout in shape. Head is laterally convex. In lateral and dorsal view snout oval shaped. Canthal edges rounded. Loreal region flat. Interorbital space concave. Internarial space flat. Nostrils oval. Pupil oval, horizontal. Tympanum distinct, oval, vertical, its outer rim narrow but clear. Pineal ocellus absent. Vomerine ridge absent. Tongue moderate, elongate, emarginate; no lingual papilla. Supratympanic fold feebly defined. Cephalic ridges absent. Skin on head not co-ossified. Upper arm short, lower arm slender. Dorsal and lateral parts of head and body, and lower part of flank, smooth. Dorso-lateral fold absent. Dorsal and lateral parts of upper arm, lower arm, thigh, shank and foot smooth. A narrow dermal ridge on mid-dorsum to back of head, then to vent. Throat, chest, belly and underside of thigh smooth.

Pseudophilautus semiruber is distinguished from P. simba, the sibling species of P. semiruber, by having the supratympanic fold indistinct (vs. distinct in P. simba); webbing present (vs. rudimentary) between all toes; throat, chest and belly smooth (vs. granular); white patches distinct, evenly distributed on throat, chest, anterior and mid-belly, fewer on posterior belly (vs. diffused white patches only on chest and anterior half of belly, absent on throat and lower belly); throat ashy brown, chest and belly reddish brown (vs. throat, chest and anterior belly black); entire upper arm and proximal half of lower arm dorsally red (vs. entire lower arm and fingers dorsally light brown in P. simba); thigh and inner shank dorsally red (vs. light brown in P. simba); and thigh and shank ventrally ‘light red’ with white patches (vs. light brown to dark brown, with white patches only in region of knee).

Distribution and ecology

Pseudophilautus semiruber was originally described from a single specimen collected at Pattipola, Sri Lanka (06º51'21"N, 80º49’40"E; 1,850 m a.s.l.). The species is probably restricted to the jungle forests of this area and is probably under-represented in collections because its small size may have led to it being overlooked as the juvenile of a larger Pseudophilautus species.

This species is strictly a day-active litter dwelling species, that is similar in habit to its sister species.

References

  1. ^ IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2020). "Pseudophilautus semiruber". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T58901A156585096. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T58901A156585096.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2013). "Pseudophilautus semiruber (Annandale, 1913)". Amphibian Species of the World 5.6, an Online Reference. American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  3. ^ Meegaskumbura, Madhava; Kelum Manamendra-Arachchi; Gayan Bowatte; Suyama Meegaskumbura (2012). "A Tiny Lost Shrub Frog Species Found After 100 Years!" (PDF). Froglog. 101 (March 2012): 5.
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Pseudophilautus semiruber: Brief Summary

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Pseudophilautus semiruber, known as Annandale's shrub frog, is a species of frog in the family Rhacophoridae that is endemic to Sri Lanka.

Pseudophilautus semiruber is one of the smallest frog species in Sri Lanka and it is also one of the world's smallest frogs, measuring less than 15 mm in snout-to-vent length (diminutive species). A single specimen of this species was first discovered in 1911 and described by Annandale in 1913, referring to it as Ixalus semiruber. For the next 95 years since 1913, this species was not again seen alive, and the type specimen on which the original description was made, was confirmed to be lost from a Museum collection by 2001.

Extensive field research conducted by Madhava Meegaskumbura in 2005, targeting molecular characterization of the Sri Lankan shrub frog species, lead to the re-discovery of this species from near a small forest reserve (Agra-Bopath) close to the Horton Plains National Park, Sri Lanka.

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