Fejervarya nepalensis (Dubois, 1975)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26515/rzsi/v117/i3/2017/120971 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/060A87C8-0664-AE6E-FF03-6E0DD1D650F9 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Fejervarya nepalensis (Dubois, 1975) |
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Fejervarya nepalensis (Dubois, 1975) View in CoL
Materials examined: 3 ex. Regn. No. V /A/NERC- 1220, Meghalaya, East Khasi Hills, Sohra Khliehshnong, Umiong ῾Law Adong. 25 o 17’05.6”N; 91 o 41’43.6”E; alt. 1312 m ASL, 04.xi.2014, ZSI & Meghalaya Forest Department survey party GoogleMaps ; 9 exs. Regn. No. V /A/NERC-1221, Meghalaya, East Khasi Hills, Lyniong village, Lyniong Sacred Grove , 25 o 25’91.4”N; 91 o 42’62.0”E; alt. 1674.56 m ASL, 20.x.2014, ZSI & Meghalaya Forest Department survey party .
Diagnostic characters: Small-sized frogs (SVL: 35.12-
38.73). The body is somewhat oblong oval, and the dorsum is covered with oblong tubercles forming four longitudinal folds and several other short tubercles on the body and tibia (Figure 1); a distinct but narrow mid-dorsal line always present, with or without red patches. Head is dorsally pointed and laterally rounded, with the snout jutting over the lower jaw; nostrils closer to the snout tip; tympanum small, round, inconspicuous and spotted; relative finger length 2<1<4<3, the 1 st finger scarcely longer than the 2 nd; subarticular tubercles globular; inner metatarsal tubercle oval and flat; outer metatarsal tubercle small and oval; tibio-tarsal articulation reaches between eye and nostril. Ventrum smooth (Figure 2).
Figure 1. Fejervarya nepalensis , Dorsal View.
Figure 2. Fejervarya nepalensis, Ventral View.
Distribution: India: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Nagaland, Manipur, Meghalaya and Sikkim in North-East India, and Haryana and Uttarakhand in the rest of India. Elsewhere: Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal.
Remarks: Recorded here for the first time from Meghalaya in North-East India. The specimens were collected from pristine environments of the Sacred Groves of the State located at high altitudes (1312 – 1675 m ASL) way above the elevation (below 500 ASL) they are generally known to occur ( Bordoloi & Shrestha, 2009).
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Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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