Abstract

Fossils are indispensible in understanding the evolutionary origins of the modern fauna. Crown-group spadefoot toads (Anura: Pelobatoidea) are the best-known fossorial frog clade to inhabit arid environments, with species utilizing a characteristic bony spade on their foot for burrowing. Endemic to the Northern Hemisphere, they are distributed across the Holarctic except East Asia. Here we report a rare fossil of a crown-group spadefoot toad from the late Paleocene of Mongolia. The phylogenetic analysis using both morphological and molecular information recovered this Asian fossil inside the modern North American pelobatoid clade Scaphiopodidae. The presence of a spade and the phylogenetic position of the new fossil frog strongly support its burrowing behavior. The late Paleocene age and other information suggestive of a mild climate cast doubt on the conventional assertion that burrowing evolved as an adaptation to aridity in spadefoot toads. Temporally and geographically, the new fossil provides the earliest record of Scaphiopodidae worldwide, and the only member of the group in Asia. Quantitative biogeographic analysis suggests that Scaphiopodidae, despite originating in North America, dispersed into East Asia via Beringia in the Early Cenozoic. The absence of spadefoot toads in East Asia today is a result of extinction.

Highlights

  • One example is a group of frogs called Pelobatoidea

  • Morphological and molecular data, we aim to resolve the phylogenetic position of the new fossil, and to address 1) the homologous or homoplastic nature of the spade; 2) the relationships of the spade and its associated burrowing behavior with arid environments; and 3) the role of East Asia in the evolution of spadefoot toads

  • IGM 2/001 (Institute of Geology, Mongolia, Ulanbaatar, Mongolia), a nearly complete specimen preserved as part and counterpart in grey sandy clay (Fig. 1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Known as spadefoot toads, they are one of the best-known examples of fossorial frogs, inhabiting the most arid environments where amphibians survive[2]. Spadefoot toads gained their name because three pelobatoid clades (Pelobates, Spea and Scaphiopus) bear a distinct bony spade on their foot used in hindlimb burrowing. Morphological and molecular data, we aim to resolve the phylogenetic position of the new fossil, and to address 1) the homologous or homoplastic nature of the spade; 2) the relationships of the spade and its associated burrowing behavior with arid environments; and 3) the role of East Asia in the evolution of spadefoot toads. The two halves of the holotype were combined digitally to reconstruct the whole skeleton (Fig. 2; Supplementary Movie S1)

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