Amphibia, Anura, Hylidae
Transcription
Amphibia, Anura, Hylidae
Bijdragen tot de calls Advertisement of Bolivian 64 Dierkunde, SPB Academie 75-85 (2) The Publishing bv, species of Scinax (Amphibia, (1994) Hague Anura, Hylidae) de la Ignacio Rafael Riva de Departamento Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, Biología Evolutiva, Anura, Hylidae, Keywords: & Jaime Bosch Márquez Scinax, advertisement Bolivia, Abstract Myers, 1991; advertisement described species. A characteristic for the each and phenograms based constructed, the first correlation, a single new the calling behaviour as well temporal and one the using a of traditional second technique that one are of each oscillogram numerical as features the characteristics of the on and nique (UPGMA) on of Scinax species audiospectrogram species, spectral Bolivian eight including information presented about calls of are Duellman & Salas, countries, contains of the least known its areas, and anuran been the discoveries Riva, of several subject 1990a, recent 1992a, 1992b, 1990b, the 1991). Among Bolivia some fauna has (De la 1993; Reynolds information the calls. mating Two calls multivariate & Foster, comparisons 1992). In this are tech- using audiospectrogram allows holistic Madrid, Spain calls, ecology, phylogeny South American The 28006 study Bolivian we contribute herpetofauna by to the the presenting teristics of the advertisement calls of of knowledge charac- eight species in of the genus Scinax, hylid known previously Ololy- as vocalizations. gon (see ment Duellman & calls of Wiens, of these two 1992). species The advertise- are described for the first time. Resumen The Ololygon as Se describen Scinax de miento las llamadas Un fonador. presentados para cas Se presentan de las fenogramas un ocho la y el en known was 1843. Fitzinger, son numérica de las vocalizalas característi- rected from the synonymy of Delahoussage Although by some cal the validity authors, features based (1977), de los una novedosa archivos de imagen the all by Wiens, a only to being America are studies that the richness a most diverse anu- great number of spe- described each year. Central and South the subject provide in an anuran of a ever questioned morphologi- species in this nomenclature for 1992). Among be Scinax other membrane between number of more diversity exploratory complex (see view of Donnelly & which toe. are & Wiens, The and genus Scinax is (1985) Ololygon) and II or lack- having on have truncate disks, the hands (Duellman 1992). conspicuous Frost long, fea- morphological I the Duellman the inner margin of the Additionally, they wider than (see Hyla mainly by toes vestigial fringe along a second contain by far the fauna in the world, and the & characters. sperm characteristic correct considered was genus & Introduction ran years resur- Hyla by Fouquette of this feature was some shared are Recently genus. ing cies is was metodologíamultivari- audioespectrogramas. Neotropics many Ololygon on tures, this genus differs from The for de comporta- oscilograma segundo usando correlación especies su información basados de ellos usando (UPGMA), en de sobre temporales y espectrales uno metodología basada información especie junto con dos llamadas, ante tradicional de los apareamiento audiospectrograma y cada sobre las características ciones. de Bolivia, aportando genus Scinax groups reports and one of 54 several of the frogs species more most in the in have abundant Neotropics. the been genus (as described /. 76 since then. in present De la Bolivia, although The 1993). has genus groups. The present study belong different been bly S. S. chiquitana, include S. is the S. and is the S. groups the S. only well to Scinax from Bolivia published America, point to Finally, generate phenetic multivariate potential group an to within species Scinax. from the pared taxonomie South tax- research. used are to The The method is first a method is the second based technique of relationships some and technique, innovative of areas methodologies discuss audiospectrograms. previously of affinities among vocalisa- trees tions which allow with inconsistencies in of areas of eight species from other different two the parkeri Bolivian Scinax of compared possible to future or onomy, and S. nasica. The group Calls are descriptions group, that would which S. nasica has been to the correlationof on relationships resulting study of the advertisement calls with the currently accepted species are com- groups. authors. Of these four some rostrata have to group appears consistency phylogenetic proba- as nebulosa. The third group assigned according solid (possibly four) as The fourth S. nasica. x-signata several group which includes S. staufferi possibly rubra, rostrata and S. garbei into first group is the S. fuscovaria, second group is the S. 1990b, considered in the least three rubra group that includes S. species - al. et In the present paper, the calls of species Riva, divided groups. The species la (De eight species to at eight additional two have been described since then phenetic lists (1990) Riva De la Riva Duellman & (see Material and methods Wiens, 1992, for further details on the taxonomy of the cies These four groups include all group). considered in the present which has castroviejoi, group (De la Riva, Since the study except been not Recordings eight assigned spe- for to S. any Puerto of sound mating analysis techniques, calls have been considered to Almacén, a (Tosi Sony heiser anuran isolating to their role mechanisms pre-zygotic species 1955, 1958, 1959; Jameson, 1955; Johnson, as (Blair, 1959). recording seconds) from anuran studies ecological of tropical the (Hödl, or for each analysed species. characteristics temporal for analysis tive individual 1965, Drewry & either Rand, from taxonomie stand- "normal" also based individual to the the on and in human general calls of genus terms, anurans but level, may have do it is not accepted show that the homologies mating above the similarities among calls that some phylogenetic significance at generic and a analysis the level may be vocalisations in phylogenetic limited and depends sidered. According on to natural phology are of as the the group of to a a is, species partitioning in con- which is used Tools to obtain mor- convergences of different fami- allopatric and (Duellman & seems Pyles, to a on the each For single representa- and a points). The tisement terminology used calls follows A total and 16 bit resolution and to Frequency transform rate (pulses frequency, mum call, number number note number of al. generate per second), information of notes per pulses per repetition different call, with types call (notes of were were: of the 1024 adver- notes, minute and a fundamenmini- of notes per rate within ratio in duration, energy, number repetition per compared note frequency, substantial maximum note, rate was width (FFT, description dominant frequency was audio- (1990). The variables considered other of minute), for the et with software Signalyze characteristics of 12 different call phenetic analysis. pulse Heyer digital sig- editing were completed at information Fourier be were of the recorded Macintosh-based and kHz appeared to for the choices recording. software. oscillograms. fast which (calls the pulse per call), dura- anuran have similar characteristics 1983). with of 44.1 numerical through of the Digitalisation hardware spectrograms tal of the system. tion/interpulse interval. communities of of however, anurans product However, species." acoustic validity certain extent, the voice is often found between lies and The studies Schiotz (1973:313) "the voice follows the taxonomy quite expected. information of the identification quality sampling frequency Sound obtained infrageneric the calls The criteria ear. certainty 1966). nal In audio- 2.5 seconds a of the sounds. which emitted vocalisations Recordings were processed points (Barrio, for either Senn- a longer recording (20-60 A generate numerical to and representative presented were subtropical included recorder A microphone. in Department in wet locality Ml 120 tape Sanyo a oscillogram selected we of Santa Cruz part from recorded were fauna allows for vocalisations, 1977; 1983; Zimmerman, 1983) or segment and first author the by specified, calls Amazonian an directional and was spectral species, The richness of the comparative 80 Me Bolivia 1975). Recording equipment WM D6C be im- in otherwise northwestern al., et spectrogram portant taxonomie determinantsdue obtained were 1990. Unless (15°46'S 62°15'W), forest 1993). inception 1987 to the original different matrix variables. in Variables order to were linearly transformed standardise The standardised matrix the was scales of in the used to calcu- Bijdragen late the The the pair-group-method arithmetic calculated ously The 1992). to those species for the from Hyla 1994 - of application statistical (NTSYS Bolivia by Márquez the package, al. et notes Both addition analysis, UPGMA to the Rohlf, of 18 calls number of (891 Hz), and (2400 (1993). second a animal on the audiospectrograms the comparison advertisement allows (1987) of the This call. for al acoustical process was Ithaca, gy, features. available and To the of the vocalisations ment call was was used composed for note which in of more was never the Museo de de la than the the Lab. of a it is the the or note the loudest individuals were "Noel as the note). depositand/or calls of this the the advertisement calls 1 Figs. oscillograms of shown in Table I. The the sound 2.5 a species and 2. A summary of the merical information from Scinax UPGMA 32.0 correlation and shown in are trees by S. rubra group This castroviejoi (De described recently (maximum Riva, length snout-vent perate valleys of the from northern Bolivia recorded in Santa Cruz, migrated on a to to small probably rain a during and males lagoon Bolivia, the shore small bushes or was were two at (SVL): slopes dusk, explosive an days and from locality 1990a) la SVL: males mm) probably belongs Riva, 1990b) and the to occurs in the breeder, Puerto Almacén it At 1991). forming large the rainy calls bushes or near of males in occurs of 41.9 tem- the Andes Calls were of Males 63°38'W). and called Scinax pond calling. perched castroviejoi it did was heard only were aggrega- However, season. The single type (243 ms), pulsed, intervals (Fig. lb). of 2172 Hz. was The No on aquatic temporal ponds advertisement call of were repeated at dominant mean or was of intermediate note and previous species perched from emerging vicinity. a sporadically. called while usually duration regular frequency records of the vocali- available. fuscovaria (Lutz, is not visited out of 1925) large species (maximum 1985). Scinax of breeder because active and the (1993) described same la Riva, during females 53.2 mm) Bermejo (Dept. when the (De tions of males by 1993) mm) 18°97'S of its is analyses species near because note species (maximum Salas, nu- produced Argentina. rushes. prolonged the eastern & (Duellman audiospectrogram large female known 48.7 single mm, la in the sequence rain forests of northern Bolivia and southern Peru It the occurs & Brazil, breeder fuscovaria was directly short on second) succession provided trunks and (Fig. lc). at regular basic Bolivia. At explosive an temporal ponds small trees, or or a low The call one pulse was intervals. De parameters usually thick branches. The and consisted of frequency (860 Hz) per forests rains. Males called from bushes call and was choruses in forming large following heavy through- subtropical Argentina, Paraguay, Almacén S. perching 1977; Frost, Delahoussaye, and the mm, in the S. rubra in open and forest habitats Chaco, Cerrado, Puerto SVL: males 50.2 probably belongs (Fouquette group Scinax la Riva from the females 35.3 sations of this 3 and 4. Figs. primary chiquitana (De mm, Scinax phenetic analyses De species This medium-sized This the note recordings. same in their second section of the calls of the different shown in the as greater intensity. composed are frequency quantitative compari- with other calls the second mating and a Kempff Mercado", Results and discussion audiospectrograms For the Hz). considered plants The dominant relatively high a and 2850 Males Description of with milliseconds), primary note primary the advertise- Bolivia. Sierra, 28 low fundamental frequency pulses, correlation Tropicales, Sevilla, Spain, Natural al. quantitativecompari- omitted from the call Historia et of Ornitholo- knowledge, onenote, specified, collected the Centro de Estudios Santa Cruz for our defined of notes Clark of different taxa. When the comparisons (we Unless otherwise ed in best of in similar two based representation used applied to single and (26 of rapid succession (Fig. la). rather than of individu- "Canary" (Cornell first time that this method is son full a frequency software The in York). New of comparison a in time sound's structure of described method, used, was in for method was vocalisations quantitatively comparing consisted always together short were high sons In call mating emitted previ- similar were of advertisement comparison phenetic unweighted on used The species pair an (UPGMA) average 77 unrooted resulting and the parameters methodology used of matrix (2) distance" between each Sokal, 1973). generated through was tree taxonomie "average Sneath & (after de Dierkunde, 64 tot of the note rate with low (50 pulses emitted in fast la Riva calls (1993) of S. fus- /. 78 Fig. 1. From bottom to top: oscillogram showing and audiospectrogram the temporal details of the oscillogram of notes; a, Scinax a 2.5 second De la Riva al. Calls - Scinax chiquitana, of Scinax c, Bolivian Scinax mating call. Top: expanded of a characteristic recording castroviejoi; b, et fuscovaria; d, Scinax garbei. covaria from Puerto Almacén which with our are coincident description. 3715 Hz and (Fig. Id). of variable Scinax This garbei (Miranda-Ribeiro, is a medium-sized males 39.8 mm, females 42.1 group (Duellman, upper Amazon Apparently, tween cén S. rainy mm) is of the S. there was in the Bolivia. marked differences in size be- are a rostrata widespread to SVL: 1977). prolonged At Puerto Alma- breeder the during leaves called near ponds. Ecuador the perched the shore of head-down temporal The call consisted of ms), highly pulsed, with a on or one or semi-perma- long dominant trunks note (950 frequency of Scinax to be call as being of whereas for the it to of 14 our the Ecuadorian markedly much rate intervals ms. described from Santa 1972, Duellman considered as Hyla). shorter agreement notes 1978, He described the is nearly duration of the frogs (range than the The either; note, per minute. The recordings 295—1469 ms). the Cecilia, single, moderately long pulsed at a rate repetition (range a of 1695 Hz in the genus Garbeana; in Duellman referred repeated 1300 1978) garbei 1970a and (in species 1972, (1970a, call of mating figure, season. Males nent 1972). It Basin from Colombia populations (Heyer, garbei (maximum species frequency separated by long were duration, averaging Duellman 1926) fundamental a The calls note calls reported 160-260 duration pulse rates from ms) is by us found do note twice that not show Ecuador had Bijdragen Fig. 2. From bottom to top: oscillogram showing pulse from 53 that cy: to shows 57 3250 ranging study. Hz In some one The ranging rates only parameter be- Duellman to 3958 Hz Fig. 3 in the pulse present rate and provided (Fig. in Duellman, our wide, flat, frequency bands, in frequency at the 1 1972) Fig. beginning on Pyles the calls of S. Santa Cecilia (1983) provided previously in the rate call (Ecuador). Curiously enough, site from 80 to 240 from from 54.5 the be to from 1564 to most either as to 650 1978; pulse 1978; rate, 1978; in 1983 ranging dominant frequency, 1926 Hz in 1983 and estimated garbei our do of the numerical parameters calls of Ecuadorian reported by ms in 1983 and from 195 1978. In any event, described later repeti- note 14 notes/minute in in in obtained discrepan- The 72.3 notes/minute in from 370 calls from Bolivian S. mating as ms to pulses/second be 3250 Hz in recordings 1978). following parameters: pulses/second mating or 100 Scinax rubra. within the ranges of the data for (Duellman, reported to mating call. Top: expanded parkeri; d, not even and from 160-260 to several c, Scinax duration, ranging the of characteristic are ranging 1983 and a published same ranging numerical garbei (then Ololygon) of nebulosa, of the variables with Duellman & recording Scinax Id, the call. data 2.5 second nasica; b, tion and (1978) a cies include the is the dominant frequen- of the differences in two of Scinax pulses/second, pulse audiospectrograms raising oscillogram dramatic differences to 1970 and and 79 of the notes; a, 240 to 1994 - structural similarities with emphasising upper less described, spite in Duellman, 195 pulses/second. according the details showed from 3453 Hz duration, show from slightly (2) audiospectrogram temporal recordings the calls tween the ranging rates but Bolivian 64 Dierkunde, de tot frogs Duellman & on the coincide reported of this Duellman (1970a, by data not for species, 1972, 1978) Pyles (1983). /. De la Riva 80 Further research variable taxonomie highly information about provide could species actual the and widespread this on note of 58 at of different popula- status The rate had This is 37.0 (Cope, 1862) medium-sized a to of mm) which has species (maximum phylogenetic uncertain been considered relationships member a of the S. rubra, x-signata, and staufferi groups (Duellman & 1992; De la Riva, Wiens, out the tem same range explosive is S. as and It 1993). mating Its fuscovaria. breeding through- occurs sys- in temporary occurs Bolivian ported obtained were W) Santa Cruz at pond, or the call consisted of with low (970 Hz) rapid one this recordings mating frequencies long call minute) Riva species His as fundamental la a note, of short duration, calls per De locality. the shore. The emitted in (337 vocalisations of same pulsed was (Fig. 2a). time and near dominant and and it succession tervals ground la in the middle of heavy rains from short grasses, on de where males called after at shows groups in- regular recorded is at the based same on the call a showing general This is a We did a mm, species females 36.0 (Duellman, 1972). of the S. rostrata It inhabits open the lower Amazon Basin from the Guiana Mato Grosso Recordings were obtained river banks were emitted or near by males rainy season perched neither the on and Bolivian data at distance from long note (240 ms) emitted sporadically, ber of and pulses high dominant with a low one num- frequency (2870 on the Duellman (1972) egleri (a junior Gruber, described synonym 1983). 4-7 notes, with He repeated the according described at a rate a calls to call of Hyla Hoogmoed composed 195, fig. 1) similar very with 5000 to Hz, to our Amazon, Brazil). He of types of two notes: note. secondary notes from temporal nor (1977) Pyles calls of S. call of S. Bolivia. the Furthermore, values spectral agree with re- recordings our of S. an rate values for The nebulosa do only the by one rate note pulse to from 3840 are not close per de- call, of 62.3 notes/ an average and dominant fre- pulses/second, rate senior that to average durationof 130 ms, of 60 data agree with the According repetition note descriptive not description 1972). nebulosa has average (then Ololygon egleri) (Brazil). published numerical provided (1983) nebulosa (Duellman, an from egleri detect the existence of a the other values do 4147 Hz. to While the those found by show similarities with us, our results. In summary, the descriptions of the calls of S. nebulosa appear to be rather conflictive. the of uniformity this species of the ences in call morphological throughout unpublished data) of Hz) (Fig. 2b). re- frogs. scription plants each other. The advertisement call consisted of 1972: the calls of H. (central from Belém de Pará minute, Calls values secondary Duellman & pulse probably riverine in much shorter Hödl ported by in Almacén semi-permanent ponds. spaced and quencies ranging Puerto at the the from 2500 Hz composed recordings to prolonged breeding system, it. Males called beyond on a the whole lasting during areas region and Bolivia. (Brazil) where the species had SVL: (maximum mm) call note not our author 1824) small relatively males 29.5 group (Spix, the Hz duration and in structure of Manaus area primary in particularly However, the audio- ms (1977) described described a the 2b. Fig. the a previously Scinax nebulosa 200 over (mean 55.6), far from (1972). frequencies for ours. Duellman us (2374-2867 are pulse pulse rate reported and ms), frequencies emphasised described the (1993) description in 240 mean by a harmonics emphasised Whereas the recordings), by Hödl Recordings and spectrogram provided (Duellman, ponds. Sierra (14°48'S 63° 10' (our Bolivian Scinax of duration of 160 ms, the values found emphasised SVL: Calls pulses/second durations Scinax nasica a mean 720 and 1050 Hz. is similar tions. - al. et leads its us to range (De la Riva, believe that the differ- descriptions reported differences in However, characteristics methods of may analysis actual taxonomie differences between be the result rather than populations. & of of 39.5 notes/minute. Scinax This parke ri (Gaige, extremely small 1929) species (maximum SVL: 23.3 Bijdragen tot de Dierkunde, 64 rubra Scinax rubra Scinax 2nd 1st note note* (2) - 81 1994 fus parkeri Scinax nebulosa Scinax nasica Scinax garbei Scinax Scinax covaria Scinax Scinax chiqutan castroviejo castroviejo are Scinax 1st 2nd note note* 29.5 (24-34.3) (3.7) 1865.76 11 162.9 7 185.7 61 5 240.6 57.5 25 19 947 39 12 243 162.2 38 26.1 (142.7-19.5) (16.2) (167.-218.4) (17.6) (201.-305) (43.6) (42.5-98.7) (10.3) (295-1469) (137.-187.3) (185.3- 8.) (48.6) (21.7-32.5) (24.6-32.) (275) 2096 2307.7 (34.1) (88.6) 2374.6 (2.6) (13) 1865.76 2096 27 7.9 2867.3 2172.4 891.1 905.6 (56.2) (93.9) (24.5) (59.9) (17.4) (53.1) 3715.4 2172.4 864.1 2848.7 (176.9-205.6) (1 1.1) (2019.-240.) (2705.8-2 6.9) (2685.-3129.8) (167.7) (84.1- 0.6) (3452.9-357.) (136.9) (827.9-28.) (210-261.5) (276.3-298.5) (2301.9-2584.6) (34.1) 0-2 10 (9-11) (0.7) 1 11.4 (56.2) (50.6) 1 18.6 1 1 13.4 (10-14) (1.3) (17-21) (1.4) (1 -17) (2.6) 5.1 (4-6) (1.6) 864.1 (0.9) (24.5) 1 1 53.1 (16-83) (15.6) (59.9) (7-9) 8.12 (0.6) (47.1) 1 23-42 30 (6) 1 2406 (43.1) 1 Number Note (ms) 1695.1 972.9 calls 27.8 972.9 (176.9-205.6) (1 1.1) 2019.-240.) (201-42.9) (2 1.-2564.) (124.9) 84.1- 0.6) (154.-176.9) (827.9-28.) (210-261.5) (84.1-928.) (86.3-107.2) frequency (Hz) duration 6 (0.4) I. next. Sum ary (6-6) (0) numerical than one type is parmetrs of the Fundamental vocaliston. the note For frequency Domina t fol wed each of the by an asterisk par met rs, (Hz) /call more of consider d, Notes 6.1 (5-7) shown When of 5 Table /note Pulses is the used mean for the values are 342.1 69.7 100.2 55.6 50.12 122.1 (1.8) (3.7) 234.3 216.1 (291.5-375) (33.7) (67.4-7 .4) (1.983) (96.2-104.9) (54.2-57. ) (74.-13.4) (53.8-57.8) (46. -56. ) (14.2-18.4) (157.-26.5) (25.1) (185.-243.9) (11.8) (2.9) 91.1 (1.3) (15) 56 (1) /second Pulses construcion fol wed of the 185.4 136.7 151.1 22.5 (164.7-206) (29.2) (103.6-156) (28.8) (83-206.7) (54.6) (2.4- 7.5) (22.8) 33.6 33.6 151.1 22.5 (23.8-457.8) 337.1 (56.3) 337.1 29.3 100.2 64.4 (1 .2-49. ) (62.9-12 .9) (15.7) (48.2-84.2) (12.8) (8.9) 29.3 100.2 64.4 0.678 0.596 1504.2 (1348.-165.4) (1348.-165.4) 1504.2 (79.6) (79.6) 80.6 80.6 (16. -46.8) (15.5) (16. -46.8) (15.5) (83-206.7) (54.6) (2.4- 7.5) (22.8) 2 3.8-457.8) (56.3) (1 .2-49. ) (62.9-12 .9) (15.7) (48.2-84.2) (12.8) (6.9-1 5.6) (26.6) (6.9-1 5.6) (26.6) (8.9) 0.708 0.612 0.641 0.828 0.663 0.842 (0.64-0.843) (0.065) (0.45-0.81) (0.137) (0.567-0. 7) (0.045) (0.724-0.912) (0.063) (0.543-0.84) (0.084) (0.5-0.76) (0.074) (0.524-0.85) (0.075) (0.76-0.913) (0.047) /minute Notes interval /inter-pulse the phenetic standard trees. /minute by deviatons Calls betwe n Pulse parenthse. duration Ranges 82 mm) is presumably a group formerly considered nym of S. followed member of authors several considered S. parker i least in (1973) valid a northern Bolivia and breeder Recordings differ De la rubra. Wiens (1992) a It occurs Brazil. and is at obtained were different. Both the merical syno- at It is probably rainy a season. locality, the type perched on call consisted of one activity edge, sporadic. have been To species females 43.6 from Neotropics southern northern South America taxonomy of both of complex under this rubra is species of SVL: includes both 1985). forests and obtained at to likely were where S. rubra is an temporal Males perching ponds. explosive species emitted Males formed and consisted of longer their breeding calls in while both leaves and branches of bushes and on trees. large persisted until dawn. The call The Puerto Almacén, note choruses that often emitted was pulsed two (primary note) notes isolation and is longer in duration and higher in frequency than the second sus 29 second pulses ms and note (1969) Hyla rubra) ms be (342 pulses Rivero 200 can 1865 Hz (163 in repeated per and 2100 Hz, ver- second The with a high note). number of second). from Estado He Bolívar, (then Venezuela as a call with dominant frequency of compared this call with that of of 63 described the Hyla) (pulse frequency mating Panama 66-72 tion of pulse rate somewhat are teristics of the of a longer 142-197 ms, range his Whereas ms. pulse description described rate not not 2 of (fig. frogs all in the Campbell, depicted as those found in similar those (Ecuador) Panamanian Campbell the 1600 at of At any rate, the calls described shorter Peru note recordings though this figure do resemble indi- for recordings this in species a of description (then Hy la) the from Santa which coincided with that of the (1971). types of calls, well, that audiospectrogram 1971). provided (1978) mating our our (1970b). Cecilia a fact located was reported Duellman by in call of Scinax rubra ent pulses/ with agree analyses. Campbell (1971) our to Duellman (1979) by call characteristics of his cated that the were at (duration us characteristics of the call of the Panama- spectral nian reflected dura- report the existence not dominant frequency of the call Hz is a the charac- to However, the note. one duration and range 67-74 does because it does secondary the comparable note call of as pulses/second) note 140-150 1581 at pulses/second. dominant frequency of 1600 Hz and Hyla) from described the call of S. rubra long pulsed about 1250 Hz. ms the centered frequency from (Ecu- (mean duration note a (Fig. 2d). is often emitted in call of S. mating with Ecuador sporadi- (then since the complex. very rate a not x-signata S. versa) from Santa Cecilia pulse later It would pulsed recordings disturbed vice x- 1 in but it shows frequency. short single average rubra the call Recordings cally Scinax that areas. small an second), habitat of S. open, Hz and cen- included being The the throughout of the Andes a Campbell (1971) males in being Venezuela (fig. described the 130 ms) with dominant (ap- knowl- our widespread currently (Frost, name Duellman (1970b) Venezuela in of Bolivian S. Fig. 2d, is be nu- of the call of H. (and species (then Hyla rubra) and southeastern Brazil. It is Bolivia, S. rubra was as Panama east actually to and the considered Rivero ador) (maximum mm) that unlikely with of the calls of Scinax is our (186 ms) 1768) (Laurenti, resembles lower fundamental rubra frequencies the best Miranda, The published. This medium-sized mm, note rubra recordings our area. Hz) (Fig. 2c). Calling 2800 previous descriptions Scinax rubra tral large pulsed flooded fundamental 2300 and was no parkeri 36.1 short dominant and high proximately a from S. from Estado slightly what for structure 1969) Bolivian Scinax of and found them 1824) However, the Rivero, be Calls audiospectrogram reported markedly signata Buenavista (17°27'S 63°40' W), where males called low grasses in data - al. et Hyla x-signata (Spix, position adjacent the whole during S. was 1985; species. characteristic of open habitats, prolonged junior (Frost, Duellman & as It 1992). a 1925) fuscomarginata (Lutz, by the dubious Wiens, Lutz by 1990a) although Riva, & (Duellman staufferi a De la Riva /. of this On the the as a (50 call described species other of Scinax rubra being composed of two long (200 ms) pulsed ms approximately). from Bolivia show (then differ- note and Similarly, two note with shorter durations by Schlüter hand, (long types as 142-167 Bijdragen Fig. 3. tot de Dierkunde, 64 Phenetic tree Bolivia. scale represents recordings notes 83 of analyses 12 of the calls of eight species of Scinax from short 24—34 ms). ms, our The 1994 - from the UPGMA resulting numerical parameters (2) to be shown by frequencies of lower for both slightly Schlüter (1979), how- whose & pulse of the rate longer note is similar frogs (estimated to that found by Figs. shown for the pulses/second) discrepancy 67-74 (range us in mating calls is phenetic troviejoi ador the on one the other hand, suggests that 3 is the belong to two may have developed tree, but does is of S. rubra in these locations status with show not of the phenogram the UPGMA concordance with genus. Again, but to markedly separated, not S. the cas- same in as Fig. 3. This is species with S. grouped and S. nebulosa and S. parkeri (the pair These four species probably dif- closely clustered). dif- distinctly ferent dialects. A careful re-evaluation of the nomie correlation consistent individuals most or (Duellman and 4. rather chiquitana, recorded in these locations may ferent types of hand, and from Peru and Bolivia degree on eight species correlations. The advertisement call of S. par- of the calls from Panama and Ecu- descriptions audiospectrographic calls of demonstrated not the tentative phylogeny the the The scale represents audiospectrographic 4) pulses/ between 1992). from notes of the keri is similar to that of S. nebulosa, according to (Fig. The second). be 60 to primary monophyly Wiens, The Peruvian resulting tree of the from Bolivia. both the ever, Phenetic correlations Scinax distances. The dominant appear than those standard 4. Fig. four different belong to in both Fig. species Although groups. taxo- may 3 and Fig. 4, S. rubra and S. garbei, and be S. and S. fuscovaria nasica, clustered are together, fruitful. the relative The lar Quantitative comparisons of theadvertisement calls if The UPGMA netic cates a hand, solid the rently level tree has are between the not clear are the to (both belong are not to grouped is clearly the rostrata in the tree. group) within 1992) few the by closely but is rest size, although estab- method related to of to the However, tween The as currently group, does rate neither phenograms mainly forest ence include in notes there is in species not and S. a (five nor out UPGMA). correlation bethe calls. ecological species garbei variables call reflect clearly striking correla- considered chiquitana and S. rubra are found both in the open and in formations. These last associated in the in habitat of S. either of the resulting any the no a utterances characteristics of either. Most of the forest, simi- more open habitat dwellers. Scinax euryoecious tantly even included see, and do same. in trees of emission of the we can phylogeny relationships is the species audiospectrographic parameters lives in the S. affinity not are between the the number of different twelve pairs cluster the methodologies consider that the are hand, staufferi tion two pheno- of the speit we The related their calls On the other is included with S. nasica in the S. cur- among the spe- are different from the because of its small the other Wiens, well reflected garbei indi- and the taxonomists. The not co-phe- relationships relationships gram. S. nebulosa and S. parkeri tree a which On consistency. Scinax (see Duellman & lished affinities cies, (Fig. 3) phylogenetic high, although cies of consistency accepted the genus not phenetic correlation coefficient of 0.897, way. from the of the positions phenograms two species two phenograms, chiquitana is phenograms. are dis- and the differ- not reflected in De la Riva /. 84 although according In summary, to some authors closely related species may show similarities in their calls (Schiotz, of the genus Scinax study the 1973), rubra in group Panama conform not this to row results of Duellman (1970b) who did not coherence between the classification of the of Hyla and the similarities among find great species calls mating (but see Márquez the 1990 Venezuelan lack of al., 1993). This et result of the fact that the tablished. On tween the holistic the other approach being clearly the by G.E. graphic correlation of become eventually is powerful a sounds. This es- a more and of numerical variables for multivariate agile frog Garbeana alter- rostrata Kempff Mercado", collaboration. of Santa Cruz Fieldwork grant from the Riva. Edwin Chacón We are who the trogram de la de trees CYCIT PB 89-0045C Ciencia, Spain. methodological (PI: P. advice and R. for the the to in a I. De la his calls the for the were Alberch) C.W. Clark calls from help analyses Sound Reig. Doñana of analyses generated the phenetic S. for its ranch, grateful to A. Machordom particularly phenetic "Noel supported by was record to us Natural Sierra, Bolivia, de Amigos correlation matrix. Additional provided by y Historia South America allowed Puerto Almacén. UPGMA and in Asociación performed de Cocroft through audiospec- analysis funded Ministerio Rican of the 1970: The of frogs was by project de Educación provided of the an genus South American hylid 534-538. of hylid frogs Hist. Univ. nat. Middle America. 1-753. 1: Kansas, 1972. 47: Leiden, South American of frogs fauna in misc. Publ., 1978. The Amazonian of biology Ecuador. Univ. equatorial herpeto- an nat. Hist, Mus. Kansas 1-352. 65: W.E. & R.A. anuran useful genus Ololygon Univ. Kansas dae), and its Hist. nat. bearing on occ. of Scinax Pap., hylid frog 1830. 1-23. 1977. Sperm mor- (Amphibia, Anura, Hyli- group generic Univ. Wagler, 151: Delahoussaye, rubra Hyla Pap., Peru. 1-3. 143: recognition Jr. & A.J. the Amazónico, 1992. The status of the Wiens, J.J. Copeia, Cuzco occ. and the parti- resource 1983: 639-649. status. Herpetol., 11(4): J. 387-396. Frost, D.R. nomie 1985. (ed.), and of the world. A taxo- Amphibianspecies geographical reference: 1-732 (Allen Inc. & Press ASC, Lawrence, Kansas). Heyer, W.R., and analyses. in Hist. Mus. Fouquette, M.J., phology of Acoustic 1991. Annotated checklist of the Salas, reptiles nat. Duellman, W.E. & 1983. Pyles, communities. A.W. and Mus. Kansas Hyla Meded. 179-195. Duellman, W.E., in the Zool. (Amphibia, Anura, Hylidae). group amphibians Museo Novitates, 1983: 941-953. Identity 1970b. Mus. Duellman, W.E. & the Mus. analysis. Acknowledgments to Puerto garbei. Copeia, Duellman, W.E., may tioning indebted of 1970a. Duellman, W.E., Duellman, are Amer. 1983. Characteristics Stanley Rand, & A. Duellman, W.E., native to the labor-intensivetechnique of extraction We of for technique objective Herpetological results the summit of Cerro Guai- Tepui reptiles. new Eleutherodactylus. Copeia, audiospectro- technique new 1991. Myers, spar- 115. — expedition to community Monogr. comparison 101 1-54. acoustic suggests that the analysis provided Quantitative analy- rela- hand, the agreement be- methods of two 5: Herpetol., consistency intrageneric of this group are far from tionships with quinima, 1987. Beeman, 76: M.A. & C.W. Donnelly, Drewry, a J. phonology: an application to swamp Ethology, song. 3017: may be Bolivian Scinax of (Anura, Hylidae). P. Marler & K. Clark, C.W., supports the trend and Calls - 52-55. sis of animal vocal does al. et Purus 1977. Taxonomie notes on Brasil. rivers, Papéis frogs from the Madeira avuls. Zool. S. 31: Paulo, 141-162. Heyer, W.R., References S. Barrio, A., sis, 1965. El género Physalaemus en la Argentina. Phy- 1977. Call 25: 421-448. Barrio, A., 1966. Leptodactylus Oecologia, Divergencia ocellatus genus phibians. Blair, W.F., 1958. Am. Texas Mating Nat., J. call toads. Campbell, H.W., chaquensis Cei (Anura, specimens in 7: the in spadefoots, 183-188. speciation anuranam- Sei., 1971. Observations isolation mechanism in 8: 87-106. on two species Hyla of the Hyla Texas U. da of Boraceiá. and calling Amazonian Gruber, and 1983. O.L. Cruz, Arq. site Zool. segregation floating and and Spix amphibians (Germany) 9: 1955. behavior in meadows. in Leiden Wagler the natural type history (The Netherlands). 319-415. Evolutionary trends of Salientia. 1959. Genetic versicolor Lutz, B., central reptiles Munich Johnson, C., as an of Spixiana, Suppl. mating Goncalves Frogs 28: 351-363. Jameson, D.L., of 92: 27-51. Texas J. in musea of mating call Sei., 1959. Call differences southwestern y L. 26: 275-277. 1955. Differentiation Scaphiopus. Blair, W.F., Hoogmoed, nupcial 1990. differences from M.S. & de acústica entre el canto (Linné) Leptodactylidae). Physis, Blair, W.F., species anuran Nelson, 31: 237-410. Paulo, Hödl, W., C.A. Stanley Rand, A. Peixoto & C.E. Le Conte 1973. Brazilian Press, Austin). in the Syst. Zool., 14: incompatibility in in Texas. species Copeia, of Hyla: courtship and 105—119. the call races 1959: i-xviii, of 327-335. 1-260 (Univ. Bijdragen tot I. De la Márquez, R., calls of Bolivian Reynolds, and new J. other I. de con no, Riva, 1993. 1990a. Lista la, su Advertisement from new the species I. de I. de cie. of frogs Chapare region of species. Herpetological Monogr., preliminar de los anfibios de Bolivia distribución. Boll. Mus. I. de reg. Sei. nat. Tori- especie nueva de Ololygon procedente (Anura: Hylidae). 1992a. la, esp. la, en Bolivia y Herpetol., 1992b. Revta. esp. Comentarios A 6: sobre descripción género de from 1993. A la, Argentina Rivero, J.A., new species and Bolivia. 1969. Sobre la of New 29: 109-118. una nueva espe- Phrynopus J. Hyla 48: from Bolivia 111-114. rubra Laurenti Mems. Soc. 41-46. y la Hyla Cienc. 1.70. Vial taxonomy system of Publishing Co., Setauket, (Univ. Missouri einem Peru. Salamandra, 1—573 and Gebiet 15: Mapa ecológico Amazon. de Received: Revised: July anu- 311-319 Bolivia 1993 an Hyliden 1973. Numerical taxonomy. von classification: The i-xv, Francisco). Holdridge & A. (M. A.C. A., comparison forest 1993 Untersuchungen tropischen Regenwaldes numerical San Herpetologica, 17 March 16 of L.R. 1983. A and des Sokal, practice Unzueta, of open of the major problems: 211-236. (W.H. Freeman, O. on Bio-akustische begrenzten principles mating calls. Ecological Press, Columbia). 1979. P. H. A. & R.R. Sneath, anuran research contemporary Schlüter, A., of (ed.), Evolutionary biology x- nat. (Exeter 1973. Evolution J.L. aspects. In: calls Numerical NTSYS-pc: version Zimmerman, B.L., (Anura: Hylidae) Herpetol., 27(1): 1992. York). Tosi, J.A., of Scinax signata Spix (Amphibia, Salientia). Salle, 4: 81-86. Gastrotheca 15-22. species new Herpetol., el (Anura: Leptodactylidae). Herpetologica, I. de F. J., Schiotz, A., in 1990b. Una la, Revta. Rohlf, programs, 8: 261-319. (Anura Hylidae) La 85 rans; datos sobre de Bolivia Riva, Riva, 1994 - Biotropica, 25(4). 1992. Four of snake on (2) Bosch, Hyla. Foster, species with notes of 64 83-104. Riva, Riva, Riva & species R.P. & M.S. one Bolivia, 6: de Dierkunde, habitat La Gonzales, 1975. Paz). of structural features frog species 39: 235-246. in the of Central