Abstract

The genus Odorrana is widely distributed in the mountains of East and Southeastern Asia. An increasing number of new species in the genus have been recognized especially in the last decade. Phylogenetic studies of the O. schmackeri species complex with wide distributional range also revealed several cryptic species. Here, we describe a new species in the species complex from Guizhou Province of China. Phylogenetic analyses based on mitochondrial DNA indicated the new species as a monophyly clustered into the Odorrana clade and sister to O. schmackeri, and nuclear DNA also indicated it as an independent lineage separated from its related species. Morphologically, the new species can be distinguished from its congeners based on a combination of the following characters: (1) having smaller body size in males (snout-vent length (SVL) <43.3 mm); (2) head longer than wide; (3) dorsolateral folds absent; (4) tympanum of males large and distinct, tympanum diameter twice as long as width of distal phalanx of finger III; (5) two metacarpal tubercles; (6) relative finger lengths: II < I < IV < III; (7) tibiotarsal articulation reaching to the level between eye to nostril when leg stretched forward; (8) disks on digits with circum-marginal grooves; (9) toes fully webbed to disks; (10) the first subarticular tubercle on fingers weak; (11) having white pectoral spinules, paired subgular vocal sacs located at corners of throat, light yellow nuptial pad on the first finger in males.

Highlights

  • Frogs of the genus Odorrana Fei, Ye & Huang, 1990 inhabit montane streams in the subtropical and tropical regions of East and Southeast Asia, ranging from the Ryukyu Archipelago of southern Japan, southern China and Indochina, northeastern India, Myanmar and Malay Peninsula to Sumatra and Borneo (Frost, 2018)

  • Some specimens of the related species were collected in this study, including 19 O. schmackeri specimens from two localities, 23 O. huanggangensis specimens from three localities, three O. yizhangensis specimens from two localities and two O. lungshengensis specimens from one locality (Fig. 1; for voucher information see Table S1)

  • All samples of the new taxon occurring from Guizhou Prov. were strongly clustered into a monophyly, which was placed into the genus Odorrana and sister to the O. schmackeri clade

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Summary

Introduction

Frogs of the genus Odorrana Fei, Ye & Huang, 1990 inhabit montane streams in the subtropical and tropical regions of East and Southeast Asia, ranging from the Ryukyu Archipelago of southern Japan, southern China and Indochina, northeastern India, Myanmar and Malay Peninsula to Sumatra and Borneo (Frost, 2018). In the last decade, 13 species have been described (Li, Lu & Rao, 2008; Tran, Orlov & Nguyen, 2008; Yang, 2008; Bain et al, 2009; Chen, Zhou & Zheng, 2010a, 2010b; Kuramoto et al, 2011; Mo et al, 2015; Wang et al, 2015; Pham et al, 2016; Saikia, Sinha & Kharkongor, 2017) This indicated that the species diversity has been underestimated and more discoveries were obligatory in the genus

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