Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 W. University Ave., El Paso, TX 79912, USA.
Herpetology Department, Institute for Biodiversity Science and Sustainability, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA.
Zootaxa. 2022 Aug 10;5174(3):201-232. doi: 10.11646/zootaxa.5174.3.1.
The geographically widespread species Afrixalus laevis (Anura: Hyperoliidae) currently has a disjunct distribution in western Central Africa (Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, and possibly adjacent countries) and the area in and near the Albertine Rift in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and neighboring countries. At least two herpetologists have previously suggested that these disjunct populations represent distinct species, and herein, we utilize an integrative taxonomic approach with molecular and morphological data to reconcile the taxonomy of these spiny reed frogs. We sequenced 1554 base pairs of the 16S and RAG1 genes from 34 samples of A. laevis and one sample of A. orophilus (sympatric with eastern populations of A. laevis), and combined these data with previously sequenced GenBank Afrixalus samples via the bioinformatics toolkit SuperCRUNCH. Phylogenetic trees, dated phylogenetic analyses, and species-delimitation analyses were generated with RAxML, BEAST, and BPP, respectively. Eleven mensural characters were taken from multiple specimens of A. laevis and A. orophilus, and compared with paired t-tests and analyses of covariance. These combined results suggested populations of A. laevis in western Central Africa (Cameroon and Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea) represent one species, whereas populations from the Albertine Rift and nearby forests represent two undescribed taxa that are sister to A. dorsimaculatus. The two new species (A. lacustris sp. nov. and A. phantasma sp. nov.) are distinguished by our phylogenetic and species-delimitation analyses, significant differences in several mensural characters, qualitative morphological differences, and by their non-overlapping elevational distribution.
地理上广泛分布的物种 Afrixalus laevis(蛙形目:Hyperoliidae)目前在中非西部(喀麦隆、赤道几内亚、加蓬,以及可能相邻的国家)以及刚果民主共和国东部和邻国的阿尔伯特裂谷地区及其附近地区呈不连续分布。至少有两位两栖动物学家曾提出,这些不连续的种群代表不同的物种,在此,我们利用整合的分类学方法,结合分子和形态数据,调和这些刺芦苇蛙的分类。我们对 34 个 A. laevis 样本和一个 A. orophilus 样本(与 A. laevis 的东部种群共生)的 16S 和 RAG1 基因进行了 1554 个碱基对的测序,并通过生物信息学工具包 SuperCRUNCH 将这些数据与之前已测序的 GenBank Afrixalus 样本结合起来。系统发育树、有时间的系统发育分析和物种界定分析分别使用 RAxML、BEAST 和 BPP 生成。从多个 A. laevis 和 A. orophilus 标本中提取了 11 个计量特征,并进行了配对 t 检验和协方差分析。这些综合结果表明,中非西部(喀麦隆和比奥科岛,赤道几内亚)的 A. laevis 种群代表一个物种,而来自阿尔伯特裂谷和附近森林的种群代表两个未被描述的分类群,它们与 A. dorsimaculatus 是姐妹关系。这两个新物种(A. lacustris sp. nov. 和 A. phantasma sp. nov.)通过我们的系统发育和物种界定分析、几个计量特征的显著差异、定性形态差异以及它们非重叠的海拔分布来区分。