Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987 is a animal in the Myobatrachidae family, order Anura, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987 (Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987)
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Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987

Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987

Mixophyes fleayi, or Fleay's barred frog, is a moderately large Australian frog with fragmented wet forest distribution. It has undergone population decline since the 1970s.

Genus
Mixophyes
Order
Anura
Class
Amphibia

About Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987

Fleay's barred frog, scientifically named Mixophyes fleayi Corben & Ingram, 1987, is a moderately large frog species that reaches up to 90 millimeters in length. Its dorsal surface is finely granular, and its base color is light brown marked with darker blotches. An irregular darker brown band runs from behind the eyes down along the back, and a dark stripe on the head extends from in front of the nostril through the eye to the tympanum. The arms and legs have 7 to 8 narrow dark bars, the flanks bear scattered dark spots and blotches, the upper lip is spotted with brown, and the iris is silvery to pale blue in its top third and brown in the bottom two thirds. The ventral surface is smooth, and colored pale yellow or white. The toes are three-quarters webbed. This species was named after David Fleay, an Australian naturalist.

This frog has a fragmented distribution across wet forests, ranging from the Conondale Range in Queensland in the north to Yabbra Scrub in northern New South Wales in the south. The majority of its population lives in rainforests above 400 meters, though it is also found in some lowland rainforest sites. The species has declined across many Queensland sites since the 1970s. It is currently known to occur in Conondale and Main Range, Springbrook and Lamington Plateaux, and Mount Barney in Queensland, and in Border Ranges, Mount Warning, Nightcap Range, and Yabbra and Tooloom Scrub in New South Wales. Its historical area of occurrence is approximately 7000 square kilometers, and it has disappeared entirely from Bunya Mountains and Mount Tamborine in Queensland.

Mixophyes fleayi lives alongside flowing streams and creeks in rainforest, as well as adjacent wet sclerophyll forest and Antarctic Beech forest. During spring and summer, after rain, males call from stream-side leaf litter with a call sounding like "ok-ok-ok-ok-ok" or "arrrrk". Eggs are laid in a dug-out nest in gravel and leaf litter located in shallow flowing water. Tadpoles of this species are large, reaching up to 65 millimeters in length. Metamorphosis takes around 200 days to complete; newly metamorphosed frogs measure about 20 millimeters, and resemble adults except that their iris is copper-red. It has been difficult to measure the full extent of this species' population decline due to the absence of historical records of occupied sites and population abundance.

Photo: (c) Todd Burrows, all rights reserved, uploaded by Todd Burrows

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Amphibia Anura Myobatrachidae Mixophyes

More from Myobatrachidae

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

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