Zootaxa2011,Issue(2880) :11.

Taxonomic identity of the patagonian frog Atelognathus jeinimenensis (Anura: Neobatrachia) as revealed by molecular and morphometric evidence

HELEN DIAZ-PAEZ MARCELA A. VIDAL JUAN C. ORTIZ CARMEN A. UBEDA NESTOR G. BASSO
Zootaxa2011,Issue(2880) :11.

Taxonomic identity of the patagonian frog Atelognathus jeinimenensis (Anura: Neobatrachia) as revealed by molecular and morphometric evidence

HELEN DIAZ-PAEZ 1MARCELA A. VIDAL 2JUAN C. ORTIZ 3CARMEN A. UBEDA 4NESTOR G. BASSO5
扫码查看

作者信息

  • 1. Departamento de Ciencias Bdsicas, Campus Los Angeles, Universidad de Conception. Casilla 341, Los Angeles, Chile
  • 2. Lahoratorio de Gendmica y Biodiversidad, Departamento de Ciencias Bdsicas, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad del Bio-Bio.Casilla 447, Chilian, Chile
  • 3. Departamento de Zoologia, Universidad de Conception. Casilla 160-C. Conception, Chile
  • 4. Departamento de Zoologia, Centro Regional Bariloche, Universidad National del Comahue, Quintral 1250, R 8400 FRF - Bariloche, Argentina
  • 5. Centro National Patagdnico (CENPAT-CONICET). Bvd. Brown 2915, U9120ACFPuerto Madryn, Chubut, Argentina
  • 折叠

Abstract

The frog genus Atelognathus is currently represented by nine species distributed in Argentinean and Chilean Patagonia. It is mainly distributed in Argentina, and there are only three species in Chile (A. cell, A. grandisonae and A. jeinimenensis). Regarding the morphological relationships among Atelognathus species, Meriggio et al. (2004) suggest that A. jeinimenensis is more related to A. salai than other species. A. salai was described from Laguna Los Gendarmes (Argentina), 90 km air line from thetype locality of A. jeinimenensis. This paper presents a morphological analysis and a study of population genetics using mtDNA nucleotide data from Argentinean and Chilean localities to assess the genetic distance between A. salai and A. jenimenensis. Weobtained 477 bp-long d-loop sequences from 51 Atelognathus specimens collected in four localities. According to our results, the morphological differences between A. salai and A. jeinimenensis populations are limited to size, and there are no distinctive characteristics that would separate two species, in addition to which a simple geographic pattern of genetic diversity suggests a single species of Atelognathus. Also, the populations from Chile (Cerro Castillo, RN Lago Jeinimeni and Chile Chico) and Argentina (Laguna de Los Gendarmes) have low levels of genetic divergence that may be consistent with glaciations during the Late Pleistocene. We propose Atelognathus jeinimenensis as a junior synonym of A. salai and that the Chilean populations should beassigned to A. salai.

Key words

d-loop/haplotypes network/mtDNA/population genetics/taxonomic/morfology/Anura/Atelognathus salai/Atelognathus jeinimenensis

引用本文复制引用

出版年

2011
Zootaxa

Zootaxa

SCI
ISSN:1175-5326
段落导航相关论文