courtesy of Liedtke and Lawson.
Originally written by Liz Kimbrough. Reprinted from Mongabay on a CC 4.0. License.
Up in Tanzania’s Ukaguru Mountains, researchers have found a new-to-science frog species with a unique trait: it doesn’t make a sound. The small, silent Ukaguru spiny-throated reed frog (Hyperolius ukaguruensis) doesn’t croak, chirp, sing, or ribbit.
“It’s a very odd group of frogs,” Lucinda Lawson, a conservation biologist and assistant professor at the University of Cincinnati, told the author at Mongabay. The new species, a member of the Hyperolius genus of African reed frogs, was described in the journal PLOS ONE.
Frogs typically use sounds to attract a mate, but the males of this species have tiny spines on their throats, which scientists think females might use to identify the males.
“The male frogs don’t call like most other frogs do. We think they may use the spine as something like Braille for species recognition,” Lawson said. “Without a call, they need some other way to recognize each other.”
Lawson and her team first encountered the frog in 2019 during their search for another species, the elusive Churamiti maridadi tree toad, in the Ukaguru Mountains. Despite at least seven previous surveys in the area, C. maridadi has only been spotted twice in the wild by scientists and is feared to be extinct. Although Lawson’s team didn’t find the tree toad, their expedition led them to the silent Ukaguru spiny-throated reed frog.
According to Lawson, describing a new member of this rare group of frogs, which consists of only a few species found in small populations, is a major victory for conservation efforts.
Photos of the new species: A) male B) female C) mating, and D) habitat. Images courtesy of Christoph Liedtke via Lawson et al. (2023).
“Time spent looking for the beautiful tree toad yielded unexpected results. It was a fantastic finding that made the effort well worth it,” study co-author H. Christoph Liedtke, a postdoctoral researcher with the Spanish National Research Council, said in a press release.
The Ukaguru Mountains in central Tanzania are sometimes referred to as sky islands. Around 30 million years ago, the entire region was covered by a vast rainforest. However, during a drier and cooler period about 10 million years ago, the lowland forests transformed into savannas, leaving the mountainous areas as “islands” of tropical forest.
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The persistent humid climate and the seclusion of each peak in the range have led to a high degree of endemism: Nearly 25% of all vertebrate species that occur in the Ukaguru Mountains are found nowhere else on Earth.
“The Ukaguru Mountains are part of the greater Eastern Arc Rift, a fascinating cradle of biodiversity, with many species endemic to single mountain blocks,” Liedtke said. “The fast population growth in Tanzania means that the mountain forest habitats are under growing threats from people.”
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Understanding how many of these frogs exist in the wild and where they live is an integral part of their conservation. And the researchers say finding this new-to-science frog highlights how much more there is to learn about this part of the world.
“We still have a long way to go before understanding what species are there and where they can be found,” said Simon Loader, curator of vertebrates at London’s Natural History Museum, who helped describe the new species. “This is particularly the case for the biodiverse-rich submontane forests of Tanzania.”
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