Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Leiopelma pakeka, n. sp. (Anura: Leiopelmatidae), a cryptic
species of frog from Maud Island, New Zealand, and a reassessment of the
conservation status of L. hamiltoni from Stephens Island
Ben D. Bell*, Charles H. Daugherty* and Jennifer M. Hay**
Patterns of allozyme variation reveal that frogs from Maud Island, New Zealand,
here designated
Leiopelma pakeka, n. sp., are specifically distinct from
L. hamiltoni from Stephens Island. Previously, the two populations had
been thought to be conspecific.
Leiopelma pakeka shows limited
morphological differentiation from
L. hamiltoni, but is highly distinct
genetically. Among 12 allozyme loci resolved from toe tissue, the two taxa
showed fixed differences at two loci and one significant frequency difference.
L. hamiltoni was genetically more similar to
L. archeyi (Nei's D
= 0.18) than to
L. pakeka (D = 0.24). The discovery that Maud Island and
Stephens Island frogs are distinct species increases the conservation
significance of both as the single known population of each species.
L.
hamiltoni is one of the world's rarest frogs and warrants the highest level
of conservation protection.
Keywords: New Zealand, Anura, Leiopelma archeyi,
Leiopelma hamiltoni, Leiopelma hochstetteri,
Leiopelma pakeka new species, allozyme variation,
systematics, conservation.
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 28, Number 1, March 1998, pp 39-54
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1064K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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