AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Leptopelis aubryioides

Leptopelis aubryioides

Kala Forest Treefrog·(Andersson, 1907)

GBIF:114130167

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(3)

This taxon, described by Andersson (1907) as Hylambates rufus var. aubryioides, was placed as junior synonym of Leptopelis modestus by Ahl (1929). Thereafter, this taxon was largely omitted and not metioned in the literature anymore, although J.-L. Perret examined the 3 Wiesbaden syntypes in 1975 and concluded (according to an additional jar label) that they are conspecific with L. calcaratus, but this identification was never published. Later, Amiet (1992) described the somewhat cryptic species L. omissus which is morphologically similar to L. calcaratus. Re-examination of the syntypes of Hylambates rufus aubryoides revealed that they are neither conspecific with L. modestus, nor with L. calcaratus, but actually are conspecific with L. omissus. Consequently, Köhler (2009) removed L. aubryioides from the synonymy of L. modestus and regarded it a valid species, with L. omissus placed as its junior synonym.

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Description of lectotype.-Adult female (MWNH 135/1); body moderately robust, head slightly wider than body; snout rounded in dorsal view, rounded in lateral view; vomerine odontophores distinct, in two rounded patches, medially to choanae; choanae medium-sized, rounded; tongue longer than wide, bifurcated posteriorly, posterior third free; nostrils directed laterally, visible from dorsal view; canthus rostralis slightly curved, rounded in cross-section; loreal region concave; eye relatively large with ED slightly less than twice the END; pupil vertical; tympanum distinct, round, TD half of ED, tympanic annulus present; skin of all dorsal surfaces finely granular, with scattered small tubercles on dorsum; skin on ventral surfaces coarsely granular; hind limbs relatively long with TL reaching almost half SVL, tibiotarsal articulation reaching anterior corner of eye when hindlimb adpressed forward along body; foot webbing formula 1(0.5), 2i(1) 2e(0.25), 3i(1.5) 3e(0.25), 4i(2) 4e(1.5), 5(0.75), all toes with lateral fringes; relative length of toes, IV>V>III>II>I; outer metatarsal tubercle absent; inner metatarsal tubercle well developed, ovoid, elongated; well-developed dermal spur on heel; distinct dermal fold on outer tarsus; plantar surfaces tubercular; well-developed subarticular tubercles under all toes, with distal tubercles being bifid; tips of all toes bearing round discs, each about 1.3 times wider than width of adjacent phalange; hand webbing formula 1(1.75), 2i(1.5) 2e(1), 3i(2) 3e(1.5), 4(1.25), all fingers with lateral fringes; relative length of fingers: III>IV>II>I, Finger I

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Predominantly brown colored forest species of Leptopelis occurring in sympatry with the taxon L. aubryioides may include L. aubryi (Duméril, 1856), L. calcaratus (Boulenger, 1906), L. millsoni (Boulenger, 1895), L. modestus (Werner, 1898), L. ocellatus (Mocquard, 1902), L. rufus (Reichenow, 1874) and L. zebra Amiet, 2001 (e.g. Schiøtz, 1967; 1999; Amiet, 2001). These species differ from L. aubryioides as follows: L. aubryi, L. millsoni, L. rufus, and L. zebra lack a dermal spur on heel; furthermore, L. millsoni and L. rufus are much larger, with adult females having 74-87 mm SVL, and L. zebra lacks a spotted venter; L. ocellatus differs by coloration, slightly larger size (females 48-58 mm SVL) and a sharp canthus rostralis. Leptopelis aubryioides is readily distinguished from L. modestus by the presence (versus absence in L. modestus) of dermal spurs on heels and snout shape. When comparing the types of L. aubryioides with specimens and diagnoses of L. calcaratus, the following differences are evident: L. calcaratus mainly differs from L. aubryioides by a sharp canthus rostralis in cross section (vs. rounded), longer snout, and the presence of a distinct contrasting white blotch below the eye.

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Export occurrence data

Darwin Core Archive (ZIP)

Common names used for this species across different languages and regions.

Kala Forest Treefrog

Vernacular (common) names are the everyday names used for a species in different languages and regions. A single species may have dozens of common names worldwide.

Kala Forest Treefrog

CLASSIFICATION

Taxonomic Classification Tree

Occurrences with images

CITATIONS

References(3)

  • 1

    Channing, Alan,Wasonga, D. Victor (Nov 20 2007) Description of the tadpole of Mertensophryne lonnbergi (Anura : Bufonidae) from the highlands of Kenya

    journal article
  • 2

    J.-L. Amiet: Un Leptopelis méconnu de la faune forestière camerounaise (Amphibia, Anura, Hyperoliidae)

    journal article
  • 3

    Visser, John: Wonderwêreld van die paddas 13. Kaapse en Natalse Kriekpadda, Hogsback-padda en Kloofpadda.

    journal article
  • Source Information

    African Amphibians

    checklist

    Miller S E, Rycroft S. African Amphibians. Scratchpads. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/9lcrve accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

    GBIF Usage Key
    114130167
    Dataset Key
    dcf01d09-13b0-4063-b040-ec270cd58a17
    Origin
    source
    Backbone Key
    9885518
    Taxon ID
    267e6b61-81e9-4168-b837-5163b2d996fe
    Last Crawled
    2/7/2026
    Last Interpreted
    2/7/2026