The water frogs of Greece. Bioacoustic evidence for a new species

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:1993
Authors:Schneider, H., Sinsch, U., Sofianidou, T. S.
Journal:Zeitschrift für Zoologische Systematik und EvolutionsforschungZeitschrift für Zoologische Systematik und Evolutionsforschung
Volume:31
Pagination:47-63
Date Published:MAR
Accession Number:ISI:A1993KV85700004
Keywords:Amphibia, Anura, behavior, external morphology, israeli, mating call, multivariate statistics, northern Greece, populations, rana-balcanica sp-n, rana-ridibunda, Ranidae, species description, taxonomy, toad, vocalization
Abstract:

The structure of the mating call of lake frogs (referred to as R. ridibunda) from 16 populations in Greece was analyzed for local variation using multivariate statistics. The populations of Thrace and of the island of Samothraki form a group giving the same type of mating call, whereas the mating call of the other populations differs in the degree of temperature dependence of four parameters, and specifically in the number of pulses/pulse group and pulse groups/call. Discriminant functions distinguish even single call series with a probability of 97 %, intermediate mating calls are absent, and there is a significant, but slight differentiation of external morphological characters. These results have strong taxonomic implications. We conclude that the lake frogs of Greece comprise two species.The mating call of the lake frogs from Thrace resembles in all parameters that of the Rana ridibunda in the terra typica restricta (Guryev CIS). Accordingly, the lake frogs of eastern Greece belong to R. ridibunda. The mating call of these lake frogs consists of 20 pulses/pulse group and of 7 pulse groups/call on the average. Most of Greece is inhabited by the second taxon, Rana balcanica sp. n. Its mating call is characterized by 27 pulses/pulse group and 4 pulse groups/call on the average.The two species in Greece do not differ with respect to coloration and size, but several standardized indices vary significantly: body length/digitus primus length; body length/callus internus length; body length/snout-eye distance; body length/tympanum diameter; tibia length/callus internus length; maximal head width/snout-eye distance.

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