Abstract

A terrestrial endemic frog resembling Leiopelma archeyi was discovered in the Whareorino Forest, northern King Country, New Zealand, in 1991, where it is broadly sympatric with L. hochstetteri. To clarify its taxonomic status, allozyme electrophoresis of toe tissue was used to compare it genetically with four other populations of terrestrial Leiopelma (L. archeyi from Tapu and Tokatea, Coromandel; L. hamiltoni from Stephens Island; L. pakeka from Maud Island). Thirteen presumed genetic (allozyme) loci could be consistently scored for the five populations. At 11 loci, no genetic differences were found between the Whareorino frog and the two Coromandel L. archeyi populations. Allelic frequencies differed slightly at two loci. We therefore conclude that the terrestrial Whareorino frog represents a western population of L. archeyi. L. hamiltoni from Stephens Island is genetically closer to L. archeyi than is L. pakeka from Maud Island. The Whareorino L. archeyi population is morphologically similar to Coromandel L. archeyi populations, although multivariate analysis suggests subtle morphological differences, including the relative position of the nostril. Size comparisons between Whareorino and three Coromandel sites (Moehau, Tapu, Tokatea) show there were more larger frogs (35–38 mm snout‐vent length) at Whareorino and Tokatea compared with Moehau and Tapu, where maximum snout‐vent lengths were 34 and 36 mm, respectively.

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