Didynamipus sjostedti
Didynamipus sjostedti | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Didynamipus sjostedti |
||||||||||||
Systematics | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Scientific name of the genus | ||||||||||||
Didynamipus | ||||||||||||
Andersson , 1903 | ||||||||||||
Scientific name of the species | ||||||||||||
Didynamipus sjostedti | ||||||||||||
Andersson , 1903 |
Didynamipus sjostedti is the only species from the amphibian genus Didynamipus .
description
The head-torso length is up to 18 millimeters. The head is broad, flattened and triangular. The forehead is as long as the diameter of the eye, with a sharp canthus rostralis . The nostril is closer to the tip of the forehead than to the eye. The interorbital space is much wider than an upper eyelid. There are only four fingers and four toes, the first and fourth of which are very small. First and fourth toes are even only stubby. The third finger is twice as long as the second. The fourth toe is almost three times as long as the third. The subarticular cusps are indistinct. There is a rounded, lateral metatarsal cusp. The tibiotarsal joint extends to the eye when the hind leg is laid forward to the body. The skin is very finely chagrined. Above the anus there is a triangular field with flat, wart-like elevations. The top is yellowish brown with small dark spots. The underside is whitish. From the tip of the forehead to the eye, a black stripe stretches under the canthus rostralis on each side.
Occurrence
The species occurs on the island of Bioko, which belongs to Equatorial Guinea, and in the extreme southwest of Cameroon .
Systematics
The species Didynamipus sjostedti was first described in 1903 by Lars Gabriel Andersson as Didynamipus sjöstedti . Boulenger corrected the name in sjostedti in 1904 . Synonyms are Atelophryne minutus Boulenger, 1906 and Didynamipus sjoestedti Mertens, 1965. Didynamipus sjostedti is the only species of the genus Didynamipus Anderson 1903.
Hazards and protective measures
This species is in decline due to the loss of its habitat as a result of deforestation, expansion of agricultural land and settlement construction, the IUCN classifies it as Endangered (threatened). The Makoko Forest Reserves , Kendonge Forest Reserves , Korup National Park and other protected areas serve to protect the species .
Individual evidence
- ^ Fritz Nieden: Anura II . In: FE Schulze, W. Kükenthal, K. Heider (Ed.): Das Tierreich . Walter de Gruyter & Co., Berlin and Leipzig 1926, p. 7.
- ↑ a b Darrel R. Frost: Didynamipus sjostedti Andersson, 1903 . In: Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference . Version 6.0 (accessed April 25, 2014). ( online ).
- ↑ Didynamipus sjostedti in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013.2. Posted by: Mary Gartshore, Jean-Louis Amiet, Robert Drewes, 2004. Retrieved May 23, 2014.