Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854) is a animal in the Ptychadenidae family, order Anura, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854) (Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854))
🦋 Animalia

Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854)

Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854)

Ptychadena mossambica is a frog species identifiable by key morphological traits, found across southern and eastern Africa.

Family
Genus
Ptychadena
Order
Anura
Class
Amphibia

About Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854)

Ptychadena mossambica (Peters, 1854) adults measure 45–50 mm in length, with a maximum recorded length of 53 mm. Internarial distance is greater than the distance from the snout tip to the nostril. The dorsal surface of the body ranges from dark grey-brown to chocolate brown or green. A broad creamy to orange-brown vertebral stripe extends from the snout to the vent, bordered by elongated blackish spots. The snout does not have a prominent pale triangle, and is not paler than the rest of the body. There are 6 or more prominent creamy-white dorsolateral skin ridges, which are only continuous as far as the back hump. Between the vertebral band and the dorsolateral ridges are dark brown blotches smaller than the eye. The tympanum is prominent and slightly smaller than the eye. The underside is creamy-white, sometimes with grey mottling along the lower jaw on the throat and on the hind part of the abdomen. The thighs and groin are often pale yellow, and the skin is smooth. The forelimb is comparatively short. For the hindlimb, the foot is shorter than the tibia. A pale line is sometimes present along the upper surface of the tibia. The back of the thigh is dark grey, with yellow mottling that sometimes forms irregular lines. Webbing is moderate: 2.75 to 3 phalanges of the fourth toe and one phalanx of the fifth toe are free of webbing. A tarsal fold is present, both inner and outer metatarsal tubercles are present, and there is a row of tubercles under the fourth toe. For sexual dimorphism, male gular slits are not parallel to the jaw line when viewed laterally. Key identification features separate this species from close relatives. Yellow mottling on the back of the thighs that sometimes forms irregular lines distinguishes it from P. subpunctata, P. taenioscelis and P. guibei. Internarial distance greater than snout-nostril distance distinguishes it from most other species except P. guibei, P. mapacha and P. schillukorum. Foot length shorter than tibia length distinguishes it from P. guibei, P. mascareniensis, P. subpunctata and P. taenioscelis. A sometimes present pale line on the tibia distinguishes it from P. anchietae, P. oxyrhychus, P. schillukorum and P. taenioscelis, though this line may also sometimes occur in P. subpunctata. Presence of an outer metatarsal tubercle distinguishes it from most other species except P. guibei, P. mapacha and P. schillukorum. A broad pale band extending from the snout to the rump, with the snout not paler than the rest of the body, distinguishes it from P. anchietae, P. oxyrhynchus, P. schillukorum and P. subpunctata. Mottling on the back of the thighs is irregular with no discernible pattern. This species is found in South Africa from northern Zululand through the Lowveld and Kruger National Park, northwards into Botswana, Eswatini, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and may also occur in Angola. Recommended locations to observe the species are Kruger-Lowveld in South Africa, Okavango in Botswana, and Tshaneni in Eswatini. Its natural habitats are flooded grass and rush around intermittent pans and permanent freshwater marshes (vleis), ponds, or streams across a variety of bushveld vegetation types, at altitudes between 200 and 1200 m. Habitats include dry savanna, thicket, subtropical or tropical dry and seasonally wet or flooded lowland grassland, as well as moist savanna, subtropical or tropical dry forest, subtropical or tropical dry and moist shrubland, swamps, intermittent freshwater lakes, arable land, pastureland, and water storage areas. For reproduction, 315 eggs were collected from a single female in Kruger National Park. Each egg is 1.2 mm in diameter, surrounded by a transparent jelly layer around 3 mm in diameter. Eggs sink to the bottom. The animal pole of the egg is dark grey-brown, while the vegetal pole is creamy yellow-white. Eggs develop very quickly.

Photo: no rights reserved, uploaded by Marius Burger · cc0

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Amphibia Anura Ptychadenidae Ptychadena

More from Ptychadenidae

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

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