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Influence of microhabitat on the richness of anuran species: a case study of different landscapes in the Atlantic Forest of southern Brazil

Abstract

Abstract: Environmental heterogeneity is a factor which can help explain the higher local species richness. The objective of this study was to test if richness and composition of anurans species are related to available microhabitats and landscape type of sampled sites. We assume that a higher number of microhabitats increase environmental heterogeneity and this, in turn, affects species richness of amphibians. We performed the study in the Mesophytic Semideciduous Forest, a vegetation type within Atlantic Forest Domain. Between October 2010 and February 2011, we sampled 23 water bodies located in the agricultural, forest, and urban landscapes. The species richness was determined using survey at breeding sites methodology, and the availability of microhabitats was estimated visually. Thirty-four anuran species belonging to 12 families were recorded. The species richness in water bodies ranged from two to 13 species. The highest species richness was recorded in environments with a higher number of microhabitats, while the species composition in water bodies was partially grouped according to the predominant landscape type that is agricultural, forest, forest edge or urban. Our results suggest that species use specific environments (e.g. landscapes, habitat and microhabitat) for their reproductive activities.

Key words
Amphibians; Anthropic actions; Biodiversity; Fragmentation


INTRODUCTION

Environmental heterogeneity is one of the leading factors that contribute to higher species richness in an environment in a variety of organisms (e.g. TewsTEWS J, BROSE U, GRIMM V, TIELBORGER K, WICHMANN MC, SCHWAGER M and JELTSCH F. 2004. Animal species diversity driven by habitat heterogeneity/diversity: the importance of keystone Structures. J Biogeogr 31: 79-92. et al. 2004, Townsend et al. 2009TOWNSEND CR, BEGON M and HARPER JL. 2009. Fundamentos em Ecologia. Porto Alegre: Artmed, 575 p.), including anurans (Keller et al. 2009KELLER A, RÖDEL MO, LINSENMAIR KE and GRAFE TU. 2009. The importance of environmental heterogeneity for species diversity and assemblages structure in bornean stream frogs. J Anim Ecol 78: 305-314., VasconcelosVASCONCELOS TS and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2008. Habitat heterogeneity and use of physical and acoustic space in anuran communities in southeastern Brazil. Phyllomedusa 7(2): 125-140. et al. 2009). Higher local richness can be achieved through species specialization, which drives the occupancy of specific microhabitats of a given area (SantosSANTOS TG, ROSSA-FERES DC and CASATTI L. 2007. Diversidade e distribuição espaço-temporal de anuros em região com pronunciada estação seca no sudeste do Brasil. Iheringia Ser Zool 97: 37-49. et al. 2007, Vasconcelos et al. 2009VASCONCELOS TS, SANTOS TG, ROSSA-FERES DC and HADDAD CFB. 2009. Influence of the environmental heterogeneity of breeding ponds on anuran assemblages from southeastern Brazil. Can J Zool 87: 699-707., SilvaSILVA RA, MARTINS IA and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2011c. Environmental heterogeneity: Anura diversity in homogeneous environments. Rev Bras Biol 28(5): 610-618. et al. 2012, Santos and Conte 2014SANTOS EJ and CONTE CE. 2014. Riqueza e distribuição temporal de anuros (Amphibia: Anura) em um fragmento de Floresta Ombrófila Mista. Iheringia Ser Zool 104(3): 323-333.), promoting high functional and phylogenetic diversity (Campos et al. 2017CAMPOS FS, LOURENÇO-DE-MORAES R, LLORENTE GA and SOLÉ M. 2017. Cost-effective conservation of amphibian ecology and evolution. Scienc Adv 3(6): e1602929.).

The advance of urbanization and agricultural frontiers has adverse effects on the occurrence of species due to the habitat loss, fragmentation and degradation, which results in a dramatic decrease in the availability of microhabitats (Knutson et al. 1999, Cushman 2006CUSHMAN SA. 2006. Effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on amphibians: a review and prospectus. Biol Conserv 128: 231-240., Cruz-ElizaldeCRUZ-ELIZALDE R, BERRIOZABAL-ISLAS C and HERNANDEZ-SALINAS U. 2016. Amphibian species richness and diversity in a modified tropical environment of central Mexico. Trop Ecol 57: 407-417. et al. 2016, Garey and Provete 2016GAREY MV and PROVETE DB. 2016. Species composition, conservation status, and sources of threat of anurans in mosaics of highland grasslands of Southern and Southeastern Brazil. Oecol Aust 20: 94-108., Lourenço-de-MoraesLOURENÇO-DE-MORAES R, MALAGOLI LR, GUERRA VB, FERREIRA RB, AFFONSO IP, HADDAD CFB, SAWAYA RJ and BASTOS RP. 2018. Nesting patterns between Neotropical species assemblages: can reserves in urban areas be failing to protect anurans? Urban Ecosyst 21(5): 933-942. et al. 2018). The Atlantic Forest Domain (AFD), for example, is one of the most threatened tropical forests because of fragmentation (Ribeiro et al. 2009RIBEIRO MC, METZGER JP, MARTENSEN AC, PONZONI FJ and HIROTA MM. 2009. The Brazilian Atlantic Forest: how much is left, and how is the remaining forest distributed? Implications for conservation. Biol Conserv 142: 1141-53.). The AFD also harbors the highest rates of endemism and species diversity of anurans, with 529 species reported (HaddadHADDAD CFB and SAZIMA I. 1992. Anfíbios anuros da Serra do Japi, p. 188-211. In História Natural da Serra do Japi: Ecologia e Preservação de uma Área Florestal no Sudeste do Brasil [Morellato LPC (Org)], Editora da UNICAMP/FAPESP: Campinas. et al. 2013). However, owing to the annual addition of new species descriptions (e.g. Malagoli et al. 2017MALAGOLI L R, SÁ F, CANEDO C and HADDAD CFB. 2017. A New Species of Hylodes (Anura, Hylodidae) from Serra do Mar, Southeastern Brazil: The Fourth with Nuptial Thumb Tubercles. Herpetologica 73(2): 136-147., MonteiroMONTEIRO JPC, CONDEZ TH, GARCIA PCA, COMITTI EJ, AMARAL IB and HADDAD CFB. 2018. A new species of Brachycephalus (Anura, Brachycephalidae) from the coast of Santa Catarina State, southern Atlantic Forest, Brazil. Zootaxa 4407(4): 483-505. et al. 2018), richness is expected to increase in the AFD. Mesophytic semideciduous forest (MSF), for example, a vegetation type within the AFD (Oliveira-Filho and Fontes 2000OLIVEIRA-FILHO AT and FONTES MAL. 2000. Patterns of floristic differentiation among Atlantic Forests in southeastern Brazil and the influence of climate. Biotropica 32(4): 793-810.) and the focus of this study, has a considerable richness with 111 species of amphibians, five of which are endemic (Garcia et al. 2007).

Amphibians anurans require specific habitats throughout their life cycle, such as water bodies (e.g. ponds, dams, swamps, marshes, and streams) suitable for breeding and development of tadpoles (DuellmanDUELLMAN WE and TRUEB L. 1994. Biology of amphibians. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 670 p. and Trueb 1994, WellsWELLS KD. 2007. The ecology and behavior of amphibians. Chicago London: University of Chicago Press, 857 p. 2007, Provete et al. 2014PROVETE DB, GONÇALVES-SOUZA T, GAREY MV, MARTINS IA and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2014. Broad-scale spatial patterns of pond morphology and canopy cover affect the structure of Neotropical tadpole metacommunity. Hydrobiologia 734(1): 69-79. ). Soon after, they depend upon terrestrial environments for the growth and dispersal of juveniles (Knutson et al. 1999, PricePRICE JS, MARKS DR, HOWE RW, HANOWSKI JM and NIEMI GJ. 2004. The importance of spatial scale for conservation and assessment of anuran populations in coastal wetlands in the western Great Lakes, USA. Landsc Ecol 20: 441-454. et al. 2004, Wells 2007). In fact, this dependence of both aquatic and terrestrial environments, their sensitive skins, and eggs (due to the absence of a shell) have led those organisms to be considered as excellent bioindicators of environmental change (Blaustein and Wake 1990BLAUSTEIN AR and WAKE DB. 1990. Declining amphibian populations: A global phenomenon? Trends Ecol Evol 5(7): 203-204., Wells 2007, ToledoTOLEDO LF and HADDAD CFB. 2003. Distribuição espacial e temporal de uma comunidade de anfíbios do município de Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brasil. Hol Env 3(2): 136-149. 2009). Indeed, many microhabitats are used by anurans, especially during the breeding season, including marginal vegetation (e.g. grasses, herbaceous vegetation and tree vegetation) and inside of aquatic environments (e.g. shrubs and aquatic plants) (BernardeBERNARDE PS and ANJOS L. 1999. Distribuição espacial e temporal da anurofauna do Parque Estadual Mata dos Godoy, Londrina, Paraná, Brasil (Amphibia: Anura). C MCT PUCRS Ser Zool 12: 127-140. and Anjos 1999, Bertoluci and Rodrigues 2002BERTOLUCI J and RODRIGUES MT. 2002. Utilização de hábitats reprodutivos e micro-hábitats de vocalização em uma taxocenose de anuros (Amphibia) da Mata Atlântica do sudeste do Brasil. Pap Avulsos Zool 42(11): 287-297., ConteCONTE CE and MACHADO RA. 2005. Riqueza de espécies e distribuição espacial e temporal em comunidade de anuros (Amphibia, Anura) em uma localidade de Tijucas do Sul, Paraná, Brasil. Rev Bras Zool 22(4): 940-948. and Machado 2005, Conte and Rossa-Feres 2006CONTE CE and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2006. Diversidade e ocorrência temporal da anurofauna (Amphibia, Anura) em São José dos Pinhais, Paraná, Brasil. Rev Bras Zool 23: 162-175., 2007CONTE CE and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2007. Riqueza e distribuição espaço-temporal de anuros em um remanescente de Floresta de Araucária no sudeste do Paraná. Rev Bras Zool 24(4): 1025-1037., Santos et al. 2007SANTOS TG, ROSSA-FERES DC and CASATTI L. 2007. Diversidade e distribuição espaço-temporal de anuros em região com pronunciada estação seca no sudeste do Brasil. Iheringia Ser Zool 97: 37-49., Vasconcelos et al. 2009, Santos and Conte 2014).

Although several studies have shown that a relationship exists between anuran species richness and environmental heterogeneity (Parris 2004PARRIS KM. 2004. Environmental and spatial variables influence the composition of frog assemblages in subtropical eastern Australia. Ecography 27(3): 392-400., Menin et al. 2005MENIN M, ROSSA-FERES DC and GIARETTA A. 2005. Resource use and coexistence of two syntopic hylid frogs (Anura: Hylidae). Rev Bras Zool 22(1): 61-72., Vasconcelos et al. 2009, Keller et al. 2009, Silva et al. 2011cSILVA RA, MARTINS IA and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2011c. Environmental heterogeneity: Anura diversity in homogeneous environments. Rev Bras Biol 28(5): 610-618., 2012SILVA FR, CANDEIRA CP and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2012. Dependence of anuran diversity on environmental descriptors in farmland ponds. Biodivers Conserv 21(6): 1411-1424., SantosSANTOS EJ and CONTE CE. 2014. Riqueza e distribuição temporal de anuros (Amphibia: Anura) em um fragmento de Floresta Ombrófila Mista. Iheringia Ser Zool 104(3): 323-333. and ConteCONTE CE and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2007. Riqueza e distribuição espaço-temporal de anuros em um remanescente de Floresta de Araucária no sudeste do Paraná. Rev Bras Zool 24(4): 1025-1037. 2014), responses to this association are related to the spatial scale. On a local scale, species occurrence in water bodies is driven, for example, by the duration of water availability (Vasconcelos et al. 2009), by the water depth (Burne and Griffin 2005BURNE MR and GRIFFIN CR. 2005. Habitat associations of pool-breeding amphibians in eastern Massachusetts, USA. Wetl Ecol Manag 13: 247-259., GonçalvesGONÇALVES DS, CRIVELLARI LB and CONTE CE. 2015. Linking environmental drivers with amphibian species diversity in ponds from subtropical grasslands. An Acad Bras Cienc 87: 1751-1762. et al. 2015) and by the vegetation type within and around the water body (Keller et al. 2009, Gonçalves et al. 2015). On the regional scale, factors driving species occurrence are, for example, distance to forest fragments (Silva et al. 2011aSILVA FR, GIBBS JP and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2011a. Breeding habitat and landscape correlates of frog diversity and abundance in a tropical agricultural landscape. Wetlands 31: 1079-1087., b, Gonçalves et al. 2015) and the geographical distance between water bodies (Burne and Griffin 2005, Santos and Conte 2016SANTOS EJ and CONTE CE. 2016. Diversity of anurans in dry forest fragments of a subtropical region in Brazil. An Acad Bras Cienc 88: 1923-1940.).

Because of the differences between the spatial scales, studies on amphibians that combine both of those approaches, local environmental heterogeneity, and landscape type, seem relevant (KnutsonKNUTSON MG, SAUER JR, OLSEN DA, MOSSMAN MJ, HEMESATH LM and LANNOO MJ. 1999. Effects of landscape composition and wetland fragmentation on frog and Toad abundance and species richness in Iowa and Wisconsin, USA. Conserv Biol 13: 1437-1446. et al. 1999, Vasconcelos et al. 2009, Silva et al. 2012, OdaODA FH, BATISTA VG, GAMBALE PG, MISE FT, SOUZA F, BELLAY S, ORTEGA JCG and TAKEMOTO RM. 2016. Anuran Species Richness, Composition, and Breeding Habitat Preferences: a Comparison between Forest Remnants and Agricultural Landscapes in Southern Brazil. Zool Stud 55: 55-34. et al. 2017). For instance, such studies provide better information for selecting priorities for conservation and management (Santos et al. 2012SANTOS TG, VASCONCELOS TS and HADDAD CFB. 2012. The Role of Environmental Heterogeneity in Maintenance of Anuran Amphibian Diversity of the Brazilian Mesophytic Semideciduous Forest, Tropical Forests, Dr. Padmini Sudarshana (Ed), ISBN: 978-953-51-0255-7, InTech, Available from: http://www.intechopen.com/books/tropical-forests/the-role-ofenvironmentalheterogeneity-in-maintenance-of-anuran-amphibian-diversity-of-thebrazilia
http://www.intechopen.com/books/tropical...
, Campos et al. 2017) and particularly to the MSF, the most threatened and fragmented ecosystem of the AFD (Viana and Tabanez 1996VIANA VM and TABANEZ AAJ. 1996. Biology and conservation of forest fragments in Brazil Atlantic Moist Forest. In: Schelhas J and Greenberg R (Eds), Forest patches in tropical landscapes. 7th ed., Washington (DC): Island Press, p. 151-167.). In this study, we investigated the variations in species richness, abundance, and composition of aquatic-breeding anurans in water bodies with a different number of microhabitats within urban, agricultural and forested landscapes. We controlled our samplings through the available microhabitats in each landscape type and tested the following hypotheses: (1) urban and agricultural landscapes have less species richness than forest and forest edge landscapes; (2) species richness of anurans is positively related to the number of microhabitats available in water bodies; (3) the species composition varies according to the landscape type.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

STUDY REGION

Assemblages of anurans were studied in the region encompassed by the northern part of the state of Paraná and the southeast part of the state of São Paulo (Figure 1), a region dominated initially by MSF vegetation type within the AFD (Maack 1981MAACK R. 1981. Geografia física do estado do Paraná. Rio de Janeiro: J Olympio, 450 p.). The MSF is a seasonal forest with a dry period and lower temperatures, and another period with higher rainfall and highest temperatures (Veloso et al. 1991VELOSO HP, RANGEL-FILHO ALR and LIMA JCA. 1991. Classificação da vegetação brasileira, adaptada à um sistema universal. Rio de Janeiro, IBGE, 124 p.). The climate of the region is classified according to Köppen-Geiger’s as a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) (Peel et al. 2007PEEL MC, FINLAYSON BL and MCMAHON TA. 2007. Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification. Hydrol Earth Syst Sc 11: 1633-1644.), with average annual temperature ranging between 22 ºC - 25 ºC and an annual rainfall of 1,612.5 mm (INPE/CPTEC 2015INPE/CPTEC. 2015. Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais, Bancos de dados climatológicos. Available at: http://www.cptec.inpe.br.
http://www.cptec.inpe.br...
).

Figure 1
Sampled water bodies (black dots) located in the Mesophytic Semideciduous Forest within Atlantic Forest Domain, between October 2010 and February 2011 in northern of the state of Paraná and southeast of the state of São Paulo, southern Brazil. 1 = Londrina (L); 2 = Cornélio Procópio (C); 3 = Ourinhos (O). Codes of water bodies as presented in Table I.

STUDY SITES

Water bodies were studied within the urban, agricultural, forest and forest edge landscapes (Table I). In the northern area of the state of Paraná, sampling took place in the municipality of Londrina located in the Tibagi river basin at an average elevation of 700 meters a.s.l. The Parque Estadual Mata dos Godoy (PEMG ~ 675 ha), a protected area in that municipality, which was also included in the study given that the PEMG and other fragments connected to it form the largest forested area in northern Paraná (AnjosANJOS L. 1998. Conseqüências biológicas da fragmentação no norte do Paraná. Ser Tec Inst Pesq Est Flor 12(32): 87-94. 1998). Also in northern Paraná, another protected area was sampled, the Parque Estadual Mata São Francisco (PEMSF ~ 832,5 ha) which is located between municipalities of Cornélio Procópio and Santa Mariana in the Rio das Cinzas river basin at an average elevation of 543 meters a.s.l. In the state of São Paulo only the municipality of Ourinhos, located in the Paranapanema river basin at elevation 492 meters a.s.l. was sampled.

TABLE I
Municipalities, water body code, landscape types, and coordinates of the studied water bodies between October 2010 and February 2011 in northern of the state of Paraná, southern Brazil. The output format of coordinates is in Geographic Coordinate System and datum WGS84.

DATA COLLECTION

Anuran surveys

For each water body, the samplings were carried out during the hottest and wettest seasons of the year, which coincide with the breeding season of the anurans species. In this period (October to March) species detection is increased due to abiotic factors such as precipitation and temperature, which are relevant for breeding of most species (e.g. Bernarde and Anjos 1999, EterovickETEROVICK PC and SAZIMA I. 2000. Structure of an anuran community in a montane meadow in southeastern Brazil: effects of seasonality, habitat and predation. Amphibia-Reptilia 21: 439-461. and Sazima 2000, Conte and Rossa-Feres 2007, GareyGAREY MV and SILVA VX. 2010. Spatial and temporal distribution of anurans in an agricultural landscape in the Atlantic semi-deciduous forest of southeastern Brazil. S Am J Herpetol 5: 64-72. and Silva 2010). A total of 23 water bodies were sampled: eleven in Londrina; four in the PEMSF; and eight in Ourinhos. These samples represented the different landscapes as follows: agricultural landscape with nine samples; urban landscape with six samples; forest landscape with four samples; and forest edge landscape with four samples (see Figure 1; Table I).

Water bodies were sampled between October 2010 and February 2011 to determine the species richness and abundance of anurans. For this, a breeding site survey methodology was used (ScottSCOTT N and WOODWARD BD. 1994. Surveys at breeding sites, p.118-125. In: Heyer WR, Donnelly MA, McDiarmid RW, Hayek LC And Foster MS (Eds), Measuring and Monitoring Biological Diversity - Standard Methods for Amphibians. Washington, Smithsonian Institution Press, 364 p. and Woodward 1994). Each water body within both open and forested areas had covered environments, where all visual and acoustic contacts of the species were recorded. Each environment was sampled on a single day, during a six-hour period from 18:00h to 00:00h and with the same sampling effort (hours/water body), totaling 120 field hours. Between 2010 and 2017, we performed occasional field visits to the study region and used data from the PEMSF species list (Storti 2012STORTI LF. 2012. Influência da fragmentação sobre a composição de anfíbios no estado do Paraná. Dissertação de Mestrado. Universidade Estadual de Londrina, Londrina - PR, Brasil, 72 p. (Unpublished).), which were added to the list of species richness overall (see Table II).

TABLE II
Species recorded in the Mesophytic Semideciduous Forest in the Ourinhos (ORS), Cornélio Procópio (CP) and Londrina (LDN) municipalities in 23 water bodies, southern Brazil. *Species which were found in the study region but were not recorded in water bodies between October 2010 and February 2011.

One individual of each species was manually collected when possible, euthanatized with xylocaine 5%, fixed with formalin 10%, and preserved in ethanol 70%. All the animal handling and collecting procedures follow resolution 301 of the Federal Council of Biology. Collecting permits were provided by Ministry of the Environment, Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation (SISBIO 2920-1 and 12120-1). Specimens were deposited in the Museum of the State University of Londrina (MZUEL) (Appendix I).

Landscape and microhabitat description

The landscapes were classified as follows: agricultural landscape (AL: areas at a distance of more than 500 m from forest remnants, with the size of these above 200 ha); forest edge landscape (FEL: less than 50 m from the interior of the remnants, with the size of these above 200 ha and less 500 m from the edge of the remnant; or riparian forest with 200 ha of area overall); forest landscape (FL: located more than 50 m from the edge to the interior of the remnants, with the size of these above 200 ha); and urban landscape (UL: area with houses, buildings, people transit and vehicles). Characterization of the environments involved collecting data on the vegetation on the banks of water bodies and in the water, taking into consideration the microhabitats reported in Conte and Machado (2005), Conte and Rossa-Feres (2007), Santos et al. (2007), plus new microhabitats that were added in the present study (Table III). For the soil and marginal vegetation, we recorded the following: arboreal vegetation (AV), bulrushes (BR), grasses (GR), non-vegetation (NV), shrub vegetation (SV) and trunks (TR). For the type of soil and vegetation in the water, we recorded the following: arboreal vegetation (AV), bulrushes (BR), grasses (GR), non-vegetation (NV), shrub vegetation (SV), and water hyacinths (WH).

TABLE III
Microhabitats of the studied water bodies in southern Brazil. Microhabitats were: arboreal vegetation (AV), bulrushes (BR), grasses (GR), no vegetation (NV), shrub vegetation (SV), trunks (TR), and water hyacinths (WH). L = Londrina; O = Ourinhos; C = Cornélio Procópio.

DATA ANALYSIS

Species richness vs microhabitat

We investigated the relationship between species richness and the availability of microhabitats in the environment with simple linear regression analysis and, subsequently, a correlation graph was constructed. Through the characterization of the environments, it was possible to quantify the number of available microhabitats, making it a predictive variable, and to consider the anuran species richness in each sampled environment as a response variable. To achieve the assumption of data normality, the response variable was log10 transformed. Afterward, we perform a Shapiro-Wilk test to check if the data had a normal distribution indeed. Significant values were considered when p <0.05. The analysis was performed using the software R statistic version 3.4.2 (R core team 2017R CORE TEAM. 2017. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. Retrieved at http://www.R-project.org/.
http://www.R-project.org/...
).

Species composition vs breeding environment

To identify patterns in the composition of anuran communities in the breeding environments concerning the landscape type where water bodies were located (agricultural, forest, forest edge and urban), a cluster analysis (UPGMA) was performed with the index of Bray-Curtis similarity (ClarkeCLARKE KR. 1993. Non-parametric multivariate analyses of changes in community structure. Aust J Ecol 18: 117-143. 1993), in which the abundance of each species was considered in each water body. Subsequently, to test the significance of the generated groups, we used a multivariate ANOSIM similarity analysis with 999 permutations. ANOSIM is a robust analysis when comparing two or more groups based on distance matrices, which are converted into ranks and compared within and between groups (Clarke 1993). To visualize the pairwise test resultant from the ANOSIM, we generated a second hierarchical cluster analysis (UPGMA, Euclidean distance) which ranges from a distance of zero (highest similarity) to one (lowest similarity). To estimate the contribution of each species to the dissimilarity of the observed groups, a percentage similarity analysis (SIMPER) with a cumulative contribution of 90% was performed (Clarke and Warwick 1994CLARKE KR and WARWICK RM. 1994. Change in marine communities: an approach to statistical analysis and interpretation. Plymouth Marine Laboratory: Plymouth, 144 p.). The analyses were performed using the software Primer-E version 6 (Clarke and Gorley 2006CLARKE KR and GORLEY RN. 2006. PRIMER v6: User Manual / Tutorial. FIRST-E, Plymouth.).

RESULTS

We recorded 2.695 individuals, 12 families and 34 anuran species (Table II): Brachycephalidae (1), Bufonidae (2), Centrolenidae (1), Craugastoridae (1), Cycloramphidae (1), Hylidae (15), Hylodidae (1), Leptodactylidae (8), Microhylidae (1), Odontophrynidae (1), Phyllomedusidae (1), and Ranidae (1). All species recorded are classified by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (IUCN 2016IUCN. 2016. International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2016-3. Available at: http://www.iucnredlist.org. Accessed on September 16, 2016.
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) as Least Concern (LC), with the exception of Crossodactylus cf. schmidti, wich is classified as Near Threatened (NT). The municipality of Ourinhos (ORS) presented the lowest species richness with 20 species, followed by the municipality of Cornélio Procópio (CP) with 26 species and municipality of Londrina (LDN), the highest, with 29 species. Richness in water bodies ranged from 2 – 13 species. The range of species richness, however, varied according to the landscape type: the highest species richness was recorded in the FEL, between 8 – 13 species, 2 – 9 species in the AL, 4 – 8 species in the FL, and 3 – 5 in the UL (see Table II and Figure 3).

Our fitted model of the linear regression (Figure 2) was normally distributed with log10- transformation (Shapiro-Wilk W test W = 0.954, p = 0.3612). The species richness of all water bodies studied can be partially explained by the variability of microhabitats (df = 21, F = 57.42, p < 0.0001, R2adj = 0.7194).

Figure 2
Linear regression between microhabitats and richness of anuran species in the 23 water bodies located in the agricultural landscape, forest landscape, forest edge landscape, and urban landscape.

The composition of the anuran communities grouped partially according to the landscape types (ANOSIM: R = 0.451; p <0.001) (see Figure 3). Thus, based on Figure 3 (left side), we can highlight a trend in the cluster arrangement, which is associated with the composition of anurans species in water bodies related to the type of landscape: (group 1) water bodies in agricultural landscape (e.g. L7, L5, L11, and O3); (group 2) water bodies in forest landscape (e.g. L3, L4, and L9); (group 3) water bodies in urban landscape (e.g. L1, L10, and O7); and (group 4) water bodies in forest edge landscape (e.g. C1, C2, and C3).

Figure 3
On the left side, dendrogram generated using the Bray-Curtis Similarity Index among water bodies sampled across the landscapes types relating to the abundance of anuran species in Mesophytic semideciduous forest areas between October 2010 and February 2011. On the right side, numbers of species (bars)/microhabitats (interrupted line) in each water body. Patterns of the bars represent the landscape types: agricultural landscape, forest edge landscape, forest landscape, and urban landscape. Codes of water bodies as presented in Table I.

Species which had occurrence exclusively in the AL and FEL were: Boana albopunctata, Boana faber, Boana raniceps, Dendropsophus anceps, Dendropsophus sanborni, Ololygon berthae, Scinax fuscomarginatus, Leptodactylus podicipinus, and Odontophrynus americanus. Species which had occurrence exclusively in the FL were: Crossodactylus cf. schmidti, Haddadus binotatus, Ischnocnema cf. henselii, and Vitreorana uranoscopa. Species which, had occurrence exclusively in the FEL and FL were: Aplastodiscus perviridis, Boana prasina, Leptodactylus notoaktites, Ololygon rizibilis, Phyllomedusa tetraploidea, Proceratophrys avelinoi, Rhinella ornata, Scinax perereca, and Trachycephalus typhonius. The only species which occurred in AL, FEL, and FL but did not found in UL was Leptodactylus labyrinthicus. The species of anurans recorded in UL occurring in three or more landscapes, were: Rhinella schneideri, Dendropsophus minutus, Dendropsophus nanus, Scinax fuscovarius, Physalaemus cuvieri, Leptodactylus fuscus, Leptodactylus latrans, Leptodactylus mystacinus, and Elachistocleis bicolor with the exception of Lithobates catesbeianus, which was the only species exclusive to AL and UL.

The cluster generated by the pairwise test from ANOSIM (Figure 4) demonstrates that the FL was the most distinctive landscape in species composition, FEL and AL were the most similar landscapes and UL was intermediary between these last ones. The most distinct landscapes were UL × FL. The pairwise test from SIMPER for all groups of landscape types compared with each other had an average dissimilarity of approximately 85% (85.3 ± 11.9). Twenty species contributed to this dissimilarity in the composition of the species among the four landscapes where water bodies were located (Appendix II).

Figure 4
Hierarchical cluster analysis (UPGMA, Euclidean distance) resulting from the pairwise test of ANOSIM comparing the four landscapes types: agricultural landscape, forest landscape, forest edge landscape and urban landscape.

DISCUSSION

We found that (1) the highest species richness was in the FEL and not in the FL, (2) the number of microhabitats is positively correlated with species richness, and (3) the species composition is strongly affected by the landscape type.

The anurans richness recorded in this study represented 30% of the known species for the MSF ecosystem (GarciaGARCIA PCA, LAVILLA E, LANGONE JA and SEGALLA MV. 2007. Anfíbios da região Subtropical da América do Sul: padrões de distribuição. Cienc Amb 35: 65- 100. et al. 2007). In the region of Londrina 27 species were recorded (Bernarde and Anjos 1999, MachadoMACHADO RA, BERNARDE PS, MORATO SAB and ANJOS L. 1999. Análise comparada da riqueza de anuros entre duas áreas com diferentes estados de conservação no município de Londrina, Paraná, Brasil (Amphibia: Anura). Rev Bras Zool 19: 997-1004. et al. 1999, Machado and Bernarde 2002MACHADO RA and BERNARDE PS. 2002. Anurofauna da bacia do Rio Tibagi. In: Medri ME, Biachini E, Shibatta OA and Pimenta JA (Eds), A Bacia do rio Tibagi. Londrina: MC-Gráfica, Londrina, Brasil, p. 297-306.), all of which were also recorded in the present study. We included two new records for the region, Ololygon berthae and Ololygon rizibilis (see distribution map in Nascimento et al. 2016NASCIMENTO BTM, MAFFEI F and DONATELLI RJ. 2016. First record of Scinax berthae (Anura: Hylidae) for the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Herpetol Notes 9: 81-85. and Figueiredo et al. 2014 respectively). Compared with other studies performed in the MSF, our study demonstrated higher local species richness than others (see Table IV), except municipalities of Gália and Avilândia in São Paulo (34 species; Brassaloti et al. 2010BRASSALOTI RA, ROSSA-FERES DC and BERTOLUCI J. 2010. Anurofauna da Floresta Estacional Semidecidual da Estação Ecológica dos Caetetus, Sudeste do Brasil. Bio Neot 10(1): 275-292.) that had the same species richness.

TABLE IV
List of municipalities that had the anurofauna studied in the Mesophytic semideciduous forest in the states of São Paulo (SP) and Paraná (PR) considered in this study.

Our results corroborate studies in which environmental heterogeneity partly explains variations in the richness and composition of the anuran communities (ParrisPARRIS KM. 2004. Environmental and spatial variables influence the composition of frog assemblages in subtropical eastern Australia. Ecography 27(3): 392-400. 2004, VasconcelosVASCONCELOS TS and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2005. Diversidade, distribuição espacial e temporal de anfíbios anuros (Amphibia, Anura) na região noroeste do estado de São Paulo, Brasil. Bio Neot 5(2): 1-14. and Rossa-Feres 2005, 2008, Vasconcelos et al. 2009, Oda et al. 2016, 2017). In fact, the number of microhabitats used by males as vocalization sites tends to influence the anurans species richness and composition (AfonsoAFONSO LG and ETEROVICK PC. 2007. Spatial and temporal distribution of breeding anurans in streams in southeastern Brazil. J Nat Hist 41(13-16): 949-963. and Eterovick 2007, Vasconcelos and Rossa-Feres 2008, Pirani et al. 2013PIRANI RM, NASCIMENTO LB and FEIO RN. 2013. Anurans in a forest remnant in the transition zone between cerrado and atlantic rain forest domains in southeastern Brazil. An Acad Bras Cienc 85: 1093-1104.).

Water bodies with higher microhabitat numbers encompass habitat heterogeneity: water bodies with a higher number of microhabitats available (e.g. presence of arboreal vegetation, shrub vegetation, and bulrushes) provide calling sites for arboreal species (e.g. Boana spp., Phyllomedusa spp.), as well as shelter for larvae and adults from predators, which facilitate the increase of species richness (Vasconcelos et al. 2009, Oda et al. 2016). Otherwise, water bodies with lower microhabitats number (e.g. only soil and grasses) in the surroundings reduces the species richness since they offer calling sites only for terrestrial species (e.g. Leptodactylus spp.) and those species which reproduce in herbaceous vegetation (e.g. Dendropsophus nanus) (Santos et al. 2007, Vasconcelos and Rossa-Feres 2008, Vasconcelos et al. 2009, Silva et al. 2011a). Indeed, the decrease in microhabitat availability limits the possibility of spatial partitioning (CardosoCARDOSO AJ, ANDRADE GV and HADDAD CFB. 1989. Distribuição espacial em comunidade de anfíbios (Anura) no sudeste do Brasil. Rev Bras Biol 49(1): 241-249. et al. 1989).

We did not find the highest species richness of anurans in the FL but in the FEL probably related to the reproductive mode of species. The specific ecological characteristics related to their reproductive modes (open or forested areas) provide the establishment of species (Haddad and Prado 2005, Cruz-Elizalde et al. 2016, Oda et al. 2016). Amphibians anurans associated with forest use water bodies connected to the forest edge for their reproduction (SilvaSILVA FR, OLIVEIRA TA, GIBBS JP and ROSSA-FERES DC. 2011b. An experimental assessment of landscape configuration effects on frog and toad abundance and diversity in tropical agro-savannah landscapes of southeastern Brazil. Landsc Ecol 27: 87-96. et al. 2011b). However, species related to open areas also access the forest edge for breeding (Ferreira et al. 2016, FerranteFERRANTE L, BACCARO FB, FERREIRA EB, SAMPAIO MFDO, SANTOS T, JUSTINO RC and ANGULO A. 2017. The matrix effect: how agricultural matrices shape forest fragment structure and amphibian composition. J Biogeogr 44(8): 1911-1922. et al. 2017). Thus, the edge of forest remnants in the MSF maintain higher species richness, since those associated to the forest and those associated to the open areas use the FEL to breeding (BeckerBECKER CG, FONSECA CR, HADDAD CFB, BATISTA RF and PRADO PI. 2007. Habitat split and the global decline of amphibians. Science 318: 1775-1777. et al. 2007, Ferreira et al. 2016FERREIRA RB, BEARD KH and CRUMP ML. 2016. Breeding guild determines frog distributions in response to edge effects and habitat conversion in the Brazil’s Atlantic Forest. PLoS ONE 11(6): e0156781., Ferrante et al. 2017; present study).

In fact, MSF exhibits just a few species restricted to the forest interior (Bernarde and Anjos 1999, SantosSANTOS TG, VASCONCELOS TS, ROSSA-FERES DC and HADDAD CFB. 2009. Anurans of a seasonally dry tropical forest: Morro do Diabo State Park, São Paulo State, Brazil. J Nat Hist 43: 973-993. et al. 2009, Garey and Silva 2010, Santos and Conte 2016, Lourenço-de-Moraes et al. 2018LOURENÇO-DE-MORAES R, FERREIRA RB, FOUQUET A and BASTOS RP. 2014. A new diminutive frog species of Adelophryne (Amphibia: Anura: Eleutherodactylidae) from the Atlantic Forest, southeastern Brazil. Zootaxa 3846: 348-360.). Most of the species exclusive to forest interior have specialized reproductive mode, such as leaf-litter breeders with direct development (mode 23: Haddad and Prado 2005) (e.g. Ischnocnema cf. henselii and Haddadus binotatus), and others, dependent on streams inside the forest for breeding (e.g. Vitreorana uranoscopa; Crossodactylus cf. schmidti) (mode 23 and mode 3 respectively: Haddad and Prado 2005). Probably, because of the specialized breeding of anurans, the FL species composition was the most distinct among the studied landscapes (see Figures 3 and 4). Moreover, the restrict species of FL (Bernarde and Anjos 1999, Machado and Bernarde 2002) could be considered the most sensitive to forest fragmentation in the present study.

Water bodies that were constructed for use in crop irrigation or fish production (Hartel and Wehrden 2013HARTEL T and VON WEHRDEN H. 2013. Farmed areas predict the distribution of amphibian ponds in a traditional rural landscape. PLoS ONE 8(5): e63649.) allow some anurans species to use these artificial habitats for their reproduction (BabittBABITT KJ and TANNER GW. 2000. Use of temporary wetlands by anurans in a hydrologically modified landscape. Wetlands 20(2): 313-222. and Tanner 2000, Vasconcelos and Rossa-Feres 2005, Colombo et al. 2008COLOMBO P, KINDEL A, VINCIPROVA G and KRAUSE L. 2008. Composition and threats for conservation of anuran amphibians from Itapeva State Park, Municipality of Torres, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Bio Neot 8(3): 229-240.). Most of the recent studies using anurans as a model in the agricultural landscapes suggest that the species richness is strongly associated with forest cover (Ferreira et al. 2016FIGUEIREDO G DE T, SANTANA DJ and ANJOS L. 2014. New records and distribution map of Scinax rizibilis (Bokermann, 1964). Herpetol Notes 7: 531-534., Collins and Fahrig 2017COLLINS SJ and FAHRIG L. 2017. Responses of anurans to composition and configuration of agricultural landscapes. Agr Ecosyst Environ 239: 399-409., Ferrante et al. 2017, GangenovaGANGENOVA E, ZURITA GA and MARANGONI F. 2018. Changes to anuran diversity following forest replacement by tree plantations in the southern Atlantic forest of Argentina. Forest Ecol Manag online version. et al. 2018) and negatively influenced by the mean crop field size (Collins and Fahrig 2017). In this way, farmland with smaller mean field sizes should benefit all tolerant anurans species, due to available food sources and for providing more effortless movement between the refuge habitats and breeding environments (Collins and Fahrig 2017). Furthermore, in the agricultural landscape, water bodies configuration related to the microhabitat availability changes according to the matrix type where it is located, which has a bearing on species richness and composition (Ferrante et al. 2017).

Among the studied water bodies, those in the agricultural landscapes of Ourinhos are located in the ecotone region between the Cerrado and the MSF and this explains the recording of typical Cerrado species, such as Physalaemus nattereri (AquinoAQUINO L, REICHLE S, SILVANO D and SCOTT N. 2004. Physalaemus nattereri. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2004: e.T57267A11597340. http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T57267A11597340.en. Downloaded on 06 March 2016.
http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.R...
et al. 2004, Santos et al. 2009). These species are opportunistic and are benefited by some anthropic activities, which could explain their extended geographical distributions (HaddadHADDAD CFB and PRADO CPA. 2005. Reproductive modes in frogs and their unexpected diversity in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil. BioSci 55(3): 207-217. and Sazima 1992).

We highlight the record of the invasive species Lithobates catesbeianus native to North America which has been introduced to the region of Londrina for commercial purposes (Machado and Bernarde 2002). In occasional visits to areas of Londrina, we recorded a water body with more than 25 individuals of L. catesbeianus breeding. This is a concerning situation because this species is a generalist predator (Toledo et al. 2007TOLEDO LF, RIBEIRO RS and HADDAD CFB. 2007. Anurans as prey: an exploratory analysis and size relationships between predators and their prey. J Zool 271(2): 170-177.) which compete for prey (Leivas et al. 2012LEIVAS PT, LEIVAS FW and MOURA MO. 2012. Diet and trophic niche of Lithobates catesbeianus (Amphibia: Anura). Zoologia (Curitiba) 29(5): 405-412.), transmit pathogens (SchloegelSCHLOEGEL LM et al. 2010. The North American bullfrog as a reservoir for the spread of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis in Brazil. Anim Conserv 13(6772): 53-61. et al. 2010), and have several negative impacts on native species of anurans (Both et al. 2011BOTH C, LINGNAU R, SANTOS-JR A, MADALOZZO B, LIMA LP and GRANT T. 2011. Widespread occurrence of the American Bullfrog, Lithobates catesbeianus (Shaw, 1802) (Anura: Ranidae), in Brazil. S Am J Herpetol 6(2): 127-134.).

As several studies have shown, our results suggest that some species of amphibians tolerate environments altered by anthropic actions, such as urban areas (e.g. Dendropsophus nanus, Elachistocleis bicolor, Leptodactylus latrans, Physalaemus cuvieri, and Scinax fuscovarius), while others mentioned above are dependent on microhabitats and/or environmental conditions only found in forested areas (MoraesMORAES RA, SAWAYA RJ and BARRELLA W. 2007. Composição e diversidade de anfíbios anuros em dois ambientes de Mata Atlântica no Parque Estadual Carlos Botelho, São Paulo, sudeste do Brasil. Bio Neot 7(2): 27-36. et al. 2007, HaddadHADDAD CFB, TOLEDO LF, PRADO CPA, LOEBMANN D, GASPARINI JL and SAZIMA I. 2013. Guia de Anfíbios da Mata Atlântica: diversidade e biologia. São Paulo: Anolisbooks, 544 p. et al. 2013) and some are sensitive to the edge effect (Lourenço-de-Moraes et al. 2014, Ferreira et al. 2016). Anurans are negatively influenced by the use of habitats in urban areas as a result of a variety of factors, such as pollution (air, water, and noise), fragmentation, loss and isolation of habitat (see review in Hammer and McDonnell 2008HAMMER AJ and MCDONNELL MJ. 2008. Amphibian ecology and conservation in the urbanising world: A review. Biol Conserv 141(10): 2432-2449.), artificial lighting (Perry et al. 2008PERRY G, BUCHANAN BW, FISHER RN, SALMON M and WISE SE. 2008. Effects of artificial night lighting on amphibians and reptiles in urban environments. Herpetol Conserv 3: 239-256.) and roads and traffic (Rytwinski and Fahrig 2015RYTWINSKI T and FAHRIG L. 2015. The impacts of roads and traffic on terrestrial animal populations. Handbook of Road Ecology. West Sussex: Wiley Blackwell, p. 237-246.).

The availability of microenvironments to anurans in these urban areas is also another factor which negatively affects species richness (GagnéGAGNÉ SA and FAHRIG L. 2007. Effect of landscape context on anuran communities in breeding ponds in the National Capital Region, Canada. Landsc Ecol 22: 205-215. and Fahrig 2007). In this way, in the UL, we commonly found water bodies with the lowest vegetation structure available and could record only species with reproductive mode 1 (eggs and exotrophic tadpoles in still water) and those modes resistant to desiccation, such as modes 11 and 30 (eggs embedded in foam nest; sensu Haddad and Prado 2005). However, forest remnants near or inserted in urban areas, even with a variety of microenvironments available, are negatively affected as to richness and composition of amphibian species (Lourenço-de-Moraes et al. 2018).

The physiological dependence of anurans of both water and terrestrial habitats have highlighted their importance as good bioindicators (Blaustein and Wake 1990, Wells 2007, Toledo 2009). However, we found only four species which could be considered as a true indicator, in the studied case indicator of the FL, which are: Crossodactylus cf. schmidti, Haddadus binotatus, Ischnocnema cf. henselii, and Vitreorana uranoscopa. Others nine species could be regarded as moderate indicators of FL since they can use both FL and FEL as breeding habitat: Aplastodiscus perviridis, Boana prasina, Leptodactylus notoaktites, Ololygon rizibilis, Phyllomedusa tetraploidea, Proceratophrys avelinoi, Rhinella ornata, Scinax perereca, and Trachycephalus typhonius. So, the use of anurans as indicators of the forest should be restricted to a relatively small proportion of the recorded species (38%). The other species are mainly tolerant to different levels of environmental disturbances.

ACKNOWLEGMENTS

We wish to thank the Universidade Estadual de Londrina (UEL) for facilities provided by the Laboratório de Ornitologia e Bioacústica and the Museu de Zoologia (MZUEL). We thank the anonymous referees and the editors, for suggestions and criticism which improved this manuscript. GdTF would like to thank China Three Georges Brasil for a doctoral scholarship. RLdM would like to thank Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) for scholarships (140710/2013-2, 152303/2016-2, 151473/2018-8). LdA received a CNPq grant (306293/2014-5). To Capes by financial support for Graduate Program in Biological Science of UEL.

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APPENDIX

APPENDIX I

Appendix I Voucher specimens collected during the study in the Mesophytic Semideciduous Forest, southern Brazil. Aplastodiscus perviridis – MZUEL1426; Boana albopunctata – MZUEL1428; Boana faber – MZUEL 1419; Boana prasina – MZUEL1793; Boana raniceps – MZUEL1793; Crossodactylus cf. schmidti – MZUEL1801; Dendropsophus minutus – MZUEL; Dendropsophus nanus – MZUEL 1425; Elachistocleis bicolor – MZUEL1502; Haddadus binotatus – MZUEL1800; Ischnocnema cf. henselii – MZUEL1583; Leptodactylus fuscus – MZUEL1456; Leptodactylus labyrinthicus – MZUEL 1802; Leptodactylus latrans – MZUEL1450; Leptodactylus mystacinus – MZUEL 1691; Leptodactylus notoaktites – MZUEL1575; Leptodactylus podicipinus – MZUEL1511; Odontophrynus americanus – MZUEL1544; Ololygon berthae – MZUEL1552; Ololygon rizibilis – MZUEL1523; Phyllomedusa tetraploidea – MZUEL1423; Physalaemus cuvieri – MZUEL1461; Physalaemus nattereri – MZUEL1442; Proceratophrys avelinoi – MZUEL1421; Rhinella ornata – MZUEL1790; Rhinella schneideri – MZUEL1688; Scinax fuscovarius – MZUEL1446; Scinax perereca – MZUEL1565; Trachycephalus typhonius – MZUEL1385; Vitreorana uranoscopa – MZUEL1420.

APPENDIX II Anuran species contribution to the average dissimilarity between the four landscapes sampled: AL: agricultural landscape; FL: forest landscape; FEL: forest edge landscape; UL: urban landscape. Av. Diss: Average Dissimilarity; Contrib.%: Contribution (%); Cum.%: Cumulative Percentage.
Species Av.Diss Contrib% Cum.% Species Av.Diss Contrib% Cum.%
UL x AL Dendropsophus nanus 12.07 15.89 15.89 UL x FEL Dendropsophus nanus 14.8 19.02 19.02
Boana albopunctata 9.75 12.84 28.73 Leptodactylus podicipinus 13.29 17.08 36.1
Leptodactylus fuscus 8.88 11.7 40.43 Boana faber 8.52 10.95 47.05
Physalaemus cuvieri 8.09 10.65 51.08 Boana albopunctata 7.27 9.34 56.39
Dendropsophus minutus 6.83 9 60.08 Scinax perereca 6.23 8 64.39
Boana raniceps 4.79 6.31 66.39 Physalaemus cuvieri 4.66 5.99 70.38
Leptodactylus mystacinus 4.34 5.72 72.11 Dendropsophus minutus 3.82 4.91 75.29
Boana faber 3.65 4.81 76.92 Leptodactylus fuscus 2.83 3.64 78.93
Scinax fuscovarius 3.59 4.72 81.64 Scinax fuscovarius 2.74 3.53 82.45
Rhinella schneideri 3.16 4.17 85.81 Ololygon rizibilis 2.53 3.25 85.71
Elachistocleis bicolor 3 3.95 89.76 Elachistocleis bicolor 2.43 3.12 88.82
Leptodactylus latrans 2.76 3.63 93.39 Boana raniceps 2.34 3 91.83
UL x FL Dendropsophus nanus 15.32 15.75 15.75 AL x FEL Dendropsophus nanus 15.24 21.64 21.64
Proceratoprhys avelinoi 10.26 10.55 26.3 Leptodactylus podicipinus 11.96 16.99 38.63
Leptodactylus fuscus 8.91 9.16 35.46 Boana faber 6.11 8.68 47.3
Vitreorana uranoscopa 7.19 7.4 42.86 Scinax perereca 5.67 8.05 55.35
Boana prasina 6.84 7.04 49.9 Boana albopunctata 5.45 7.73 63.08
Physalaemus cuvieri 6.67 6.86 56.76 Dendropsophus minutus 4.09 5.8 68.89
Aplastodiscus perviridis 5.76 5.92 62.68 Physalaemus cuvieri 3.84 5.45 74.34
Ischnocnema cf. henselii 5.48 5.64 68.32 Boana raniceps 3.41 4.85 79.19
Haddadus binotatus 4.76 4.9 73.21 Leptodactylus fuscus 2.72 3.86 83.05
Scinax perereca 4.76 4.89 78.1 Scinax fuscovarius 2.48 3.53 86.57
Leptodactylus mystacinus 4.67 4.8 82.91 Ololygon rizibilis 2.29 3.26 89.83
Rhinella schneideri 3.05 3.13 86.04 Elachistocleis bicolor 2.27 3.22 93.05
ALxFL Boana albopunctata 9.31 9.55 9.55 FLxFEL Dendropsophus nanus 20.8 22.4 22.4
Proceratoprhys avelinoi 8.95 9.18 18.73 Leptodactylus podicipinus 12.91 13.9 36.3
Dendropsophus nanus 8.34 8.55 27.28 Boana faber 7.17 7.72 44.02
Physalaemus cuvieri 6.56 6.73 34.01 Boana albopunctata 7.05 7.59 51.61
Dendropsophus minutus 6.51 6.68 40.68 Physalaemus cuvieri 6.4 6.89 58.5
Vitreorana uranoscopa 6.28 6.44 47.12 Scinax perereca 4.98 5.36 63.86
Boana prasina 6 6.16 53.27 Proceratoprhys avelinoi 4.54 4.89 68.75
Leptodactylus fuscus 5.11 5.24 58.51 Boana prasina 2.9 3.13 71.87
Aplastodiscus perviridis 5.02 5.15 63.66 Vitreorana uranoscopa 2.89 3.11 74.98
Ischnocnema cf. henselii 4.78 4.9 68.56 Dendropsophus minutus 2.75 2.96 77.94
Boana raniceps 4.54 4.66 73.22 Aplastodiscus perviridis 2.55 2.75 80.69
Haddadus binotatus 4.16 4.27 77.49 Ololygon rizibilis 2.45 2.64 83.33
Scinax perereca 4.15 4.25 81.74 Ischnocnema cf. henselii 2.35 2.53 85.86
Boana faber 3.9 4 85.74 Boana raniceps 2.28 2.45 88.31

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    01 July 2019
  • Date of issue
    2019

History

  • Received
    3 July 2017
  • Accepted
    25 July 2018
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