Rhacophorus viridis viridis ( Hallowell, 1861 )

Nakamura, Y & Ota, H, 2015, Late Pleistocene-Holocene amphibians from Okinawajima Island in the Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan: Reconfirmed faunal endemicity and the Holocene range collapse of forest-dwelling species, Palaeontologia Electronica 28 (6), pp. 1-26 : 12-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/503

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0149542F-5C3F-352C-584B-B44A3E3F367C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Rhacophorus viridis viridis ( Hallowell, 1861 )
status

 

Rhacophorus viridis viridis ( Hallowell, 1861) View in CoL — Okinawa Green Tree Frog

Figure 6.5–6.11 View FIGURE 6

Occurrence (MNI). Minatogawa: 1; Sashiki (lower unit): 6, (upper unit): 1.

Referred material. Minatogawa: 2 gender unknown humeri (1 right and 1 left: YMHF-MA 011 ); Sashiki (lower unit): 7 female humeri (2 right and 5 left: RUMF-GF-04025), 1 gender unknown humerus (left: RUMF-GF-04026), 1 ilium (right: RUMF-GF-04028), and 1 pelvic girdle (RUMF-GF-04029); Sashiki (upper unit): 1 male humerus (left: RUMF-GF-04027) .

Humerus. These middle-sized slender humeri ( Figure 6.5–6.10 View FIGURE 6 ) can readily be referred to rhacophorine genera (e.g., Kurixalus , Polypedates , and Rhacophorus ) on the basis of having a developed crista medialis and crista lateralis; a slender shaft with a mediolaterally thin proximal part; an indistinct olecranon scar; a gently curved ventral and distal edges of the crista ventralis (in mediolateral views); the distal edge of the crista ventralis that meets at a slight angle to the ventral outline of the shaft (in mediolateral views); and a small and proximodistally elongated eminentia capitata ( Nokariya, 1983b).

The fossil humeri resemble those of Rhacophorus viridis , the only indigenous rhacophorine species in the Central Ryukyus, and differ from those of Polypedates leucomystax (a rhacophorine species naturalized in the Ryukyus: see above) in having a crista ventralis that extends distally to almost the midpoint of the shaft (vs. usually confined to one-third of the shaft: Nokariya, 1983b) and male’s crista medialis that extends medially beyond the level of the medial edge of the epicondylus ulnaris (vs. less-developed). The gender of the fossil humeri was inferred from the developmental degree of the crista lateralis and the crista medialis ( Nokariya, 1983b).

Ilium. The fossil ilia ( Figure 6.11 View FIGURE 6 ) are referred to rhacophorine frogs on the basis of having a wide preacetabular zone ( Nokariya, 1983b), a small and tubercle-like tuber superior, a thick and low crista dorsalis (the height is much less than that of the acetabulum), and a nearly fused supracetabular fossa. They resemble those of Rh. viridis and differ from those of P. leucomystax in having a tuber superior that is separated from the acetabular margin (vs. contact: Nokariya, 1983b) and a straight dorsal margin of the crista dorsalis that is in parallel with the ventral margin of the ilial shaft (vs. a posteriorly sloping posterior part of the crest: Nakamura et al., 2009).

Remarks. Currently, two subspecies are recognized under Rhacophorus viridis ( Maeda and Matsui, 1999) . The fossils are referred to Rh. viridis viridis on the basis of the exclusive occurrence on the island.

Order CAUDATA Fischer von Waldheim, 1813

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Anura

Family

Rhacophoridae

Genus

Rhacophorus

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