identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
80E7D024312350C28C6B9C442E463CAC.text	80E7D024312350C28C6B9C442E463CAC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leptobrachella eos (Ohler, Wollenberg, Grosjean, Hendrix, Vences, Ziegler & Dubois 2011)	<div><p>Leptobrachella eos (Ohler, Wollenberg, Grosjean, Hendrix, Vences, Ziegler &amp; Dubois, 2011)</p> <p>Specimen examined.</p> <p>Adult female (AUP 00377) collected on 05 October 2018 by the Chatmongkon Suwannapoom and Parinya Pawangkhanant from Chom poo Phuka nature trail, Nan Province, Bo Kluea District, Thailand (19.0181°N, 100.9731°E, 1300 m elevation).</p> <p>Morphological description</p> <p>(measurements in mm; provided in Table 3). Morphological characters of the specimen from Thailand agreed well with the original description of Ohler et al. (2011). Adult female with SVL 34.2 mm; head length (HL 13.6 mm, 39.7% of SVL) slightly longer than width (HW 12.1 mm, 35.5% of SVL); snout slightly protruding, its length (SL 5.3 mm, 15.5% of SVL) longer than horizontal diameter of eye (EL 4.4 mm, 12.8% of SVL); canthus rostralis rounded, loreal region concave; interorbital space flat, larger (IOD 4.0 mm, 11.6% of SVL) than width of upper eyelid (UEW 2.8 mm, 8.2% of SVL) and internarial distance (IN 3.6 mm, 10.6% of SVL); snout longer than eye diameter (SL/ED 120.5%); tympanum distinct (TD 4.0 mm), rounded, about half eye diameter (ED 4.4 mm); vomerine teeth absent; supratympanic fold distinct; pupil vertical (Fig. 3).</p> <p>Forelimbs slender; lower arm length (LAL 22.0 mm, 47.3% of SVL) shorter than hand length (HAL 10.1 mm, 29.6% of SVL); relative finger lengths: I&lt;II&lt;IV&lt;III; tips of all fingers slightly enlarged; no webbing between fingers; subarticular tubercles distinct, big; two metacarpal tubercles, inner metacarpal tubercle (IPTL 1.5 mm, 4.4% of SVL) almost equal to outer metacarpal tubercle relatively (OPTL 1.6 mm, 4.6% of SVL).</p> <p>Hindlimbs long, tibia (TL 16.4 mm) about half SVL and shorter and foot (FL 23.5 mm); relative length of toes: I&lt;II&lt;III&lt;V&lt;IV; tibiotarsal articulation reaching the nostril when the leg is stretched forward; heels overlapping when thighs are positioned at right angles to the body; tips of toes rounded and not swollen; rudimentary webbing between toes; subarticular tubercles distinct, rounded; inner metatarsal tubercle distinct and oval (IMTL 2.0 mm, 5.7% of SVL), outer metatarsal tubercle distinct (OMTL 2.2 mm, 6.3% of SVL).</p> <p>Dorsal skin relatively smooth, with small tubercles; side of head and dorsum shagreened; tiny warts scattered on flanks; supratympanic fold prominent, running from posterior corner of eye towards axilla; dorsal parts of limbs: forelimbs shagreened; thigh and shank with glandular warts; tarsus smooth; femoral glands and pectoral gland distinct, oval; axillary glands indistinct; ventrolateral glands forming continuous white line on flanks.</p> <p>In life, dorsal surface brown, with reddish-brown W-shaped marking on scapular region; distinct reverse-triangle black marking between eyes; tympanic region brown gray; dorsal surfaces of elbow to upper arm with distinctive reddish-brown coloration; transverse dark-brown bars present on dorsal surface of the limbs; iris distinctly bicolored, bright orange-red in upper half and silvery-white in lower half (Fig. 3).</p> <p>In preservation. Dorsum of the body and hindlimbs light brownish gray; transverse bars on the limbs distinct, and dark-brown patterns; marks and spots on the back are indistinct; ventral surface of the body is yellowish brown with brown marbling on the sides and chest; axillary glands, femoral, pectoral and ventrolateral glands fade to grayish white.</p> <p>Ecological notes.</p> <p>Leptobrachella eos was found along a rocky stream in Montane Forest, with dense vegetation of Wild Banana (Musa acuminata) and Bamboo (Cephalostachyum sp.) (Fig. 4). The male was found calling mainly hidden under leaf litter.</p> <p>Distribution.</p> <p>Leptobrachella eos is currently known in Phongsaly, Bolikhamxay, Oudomxai, and Xiasomboun Provinces, Laos; Dien Bien, Thanh Hoa, and Son La Provinces, northwestern Vietnam; Yunnan province, China and Nan province, Thailand.</p> </div>	http://treatment.plazi.org/id/80E7D024312350C28C6B9C442E463CAC	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Wu 1, Yun-He;Chen, Jin-Min;Pawangkhanant, Parinya;Yothawut, Chatchai;Karuno, Alex P.;Suwannapoom, Chatmongkon;Che, Jing	Wu 1, Yun-He, Chen, Jin-Min, Pawangkhanant, Parinya, Yothawut, Chatchai, Karuno, Alex P., Suwannapoom, Chatmongkon, Che, Jing (2022): Distribution extension of Leptobrachella eos (Ohler, Wollenberg, Grosjean, Hendrix, Vences, Ziegler & Dubois, 2011): first record from Thailand. Herpetozoa 35: 25-32, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/herpetozoa.35.e78627, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/herpetozoa.35.e78627
