Craugastor talamancae (Dunn, 1931) is a animal in the Craugastoridae family, order Anura, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Craugastor talamancae (Dunn, 1931) (Craugastor talamancae (Dunn, 1931))
🦋 Animalia

Craugastor talamancae (Dunn, 1931)

Craugastor talamancae (Dunn, 1931)

Craugastor talamancae is a small nocturnal leaf litter frog found in Central American humid forests.

Genus
Craugastor
Order
Anura
Class
Amphibia

About Craugastor talamancae (Dunn, 1931)

Craugastor talamancae, first formally described by Dunn in 1931, shows sexual size dimorphism in snout–vent length: males reach 30 mm (1.2 in), while females reach 50 mm (2.0 in). This species has long limbs, with moderately webbed toes. Its dorsal color is most often brown. Key identifying traits include a dark bar that crosses through the eye, and distinct barring on the arms and legs. The ventral body surfaces are white, with faint yellow coloring on the posterior parts of the body. The throat can show a subtle reddish tint. The upper half of the iris is golden, and the lower half is brown. Juveniles have a clearly visible white line along the lip. Males produce an advertisement call that sounds like a high-pitched mew. This frog lives in humid lowland and montane old-growth and secondary forests, at elevations ranging from 15 to 646 m (49 to 2,119 ft) above sea level. It can occasionally be found in modified human-altered habitats. It is a nocturnal species: during the day it hides within leaf litter on the forest floor, and at night it typically moves up to low-lying vegetation. Its diet is made up of small arthropods, and it does not eat hemipterans. Craugastor talamancae is common across some parts of its range, but populations have declined and the species is rare in other areas. It has been recorded within multiple protected areas. This species faces threats from habitat loss from deforestation driven by agricultural expansion and logging. Chytrid fungus has been detected in this species, and it is also threatened by climate-driven decreases in the amount of intact standing leaf litter in its habitat.

Photo: (c) Toby Hibbitts, all rights reserved

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Amphibia Anura Craugastoridae Craugastor

More from Craugastoridae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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