March 12,
2019 by Natalie Van Hoose, Florida Museum of Natural History
The
starry dwarf frog is an expert hider. Plunging into leaf litter at the
slightest disturbance, it has successfully evaded attention for millions of
years—until now.
The
thumbnail-sized species was
discovered in India's Western Ghats, one of the world's "hottest"
biodiversity hotspots. Scientists have named the frog Astrobatrachus kurichiyana for its constellation-like markings
and the indigenous people of Kurichiyarmala, the hill range where it was found.
But A.
kurichiyana is not only a new species to
science. It's the sole member of an ancient lineage, a long branch on the frog
tree of life that researchers have classified as a new subfamily,
Astrobatrachinae.
"This
is an oddball frog—it has no close sister species for maybe tens of millions of
years," said David Blackburn, the associate curator of herpetology at the
Florida Museum of Natural History. "With frogs, there are still ancient
lineages out there awaiting discovery. This gives us one more puzzle piece to
think about deep time."
Dark
brown with a bright orange underbelly and speckled with pale blue dots, the
frog camouflages well in wet leaf litter, and
only a few individuals have been found.
"The
coloration was the first thing that stood out to me, these starry patterns with
a blue tinge," said Seenapuram Palaniswamy Vijayakumar, lead author of the
species description and now a postdoctoral fellow at George Washington
University. "We hadn't seen anything like this before."
But the
starry dwarf frog nearly got overlooked in the crush of new species that
Vijayakumar and his then-doctoral supervisor Kartik Shanker were finding on a
series of expeditions to the Western Ghats, a 1,000-mile-long mountain range
along India's southwestern coast.
Vijayakumar
and Shanker, associate professor at the Indian Institute of Science, had
designed a meticulous study, covering multiple elevations, habitats and hill
ranges to record and map the region's frogs, lizards and snakes.
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