AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Breviceps ombelanonga

Breviceps ombelanonga

Nielsen, Conradie, Ceriaco, Bauer, Heinicke, Stanley & Blackburn, 2020

GBIF:231569731

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(1)

Material (4 specimens): PEM A 12787, Quembo River source lake, - 13.13544 ° 19.04397 °, 1,374 m asl; PEM A 12800, Cuanavale River source lake, - 13.08934 ° 18.89485 °, 1,359 m asl; PEM A 12770, Cuando River source, - 13.00334 ° 19.13564 °, 1,362 m asl; PEM A 12537, Cuito River source lake, - 12.68935 ° 18.36012 °, 1,431 m asl. Additional material (1 specimen): SAIAB 204537, Quembo River source lake, - 13.13583 ° 19.04528 °, 1,370 m asl. Description: Medium sized Breviceps; stout body; snout extremely shortened; pupils horizontally elliptical; tympanum not visible; outer metacarpal tubercle flat and undivided; short limbs; webbing absent; well-developed inner metatarsal tubercle fused with the outer metatarsal tubercle, with no deep cleft present, elongated, and protruding outwards. Coloration varied from red with scattered black blotches, dark brown with red spots and markings, and light brown with red spots and black blotches (Nielsen et al. 2020). The only female collected measured 30.1 mm (PEM A 12770); adult males (n = 3) varied from 18.3 – 26.6 (26.2) mm (largest male: PEM A 12787). Habitat and natural history notes: Males were only heard calling during the day, especially after heavy rains; calling did not continue into the evenings. Call sites were among leaf litter in dense miombo woodland. Comments: The taxonomic status of Angolan Breviceps was recently addressed, leading to the description of this material as a new species, B. ombelanonga (Nielsen et al. 2020). Broader sampling across Angola may detect the presence of other species (e. g., B. adspersus to the south and B. poweri to the east) and even additional undescribed species. For now, all historical records are mapped as B. ombelanonga, until their taxonomic status can be confirmed.
Conradie, Werner, Keates, Chad, Verburgt, Luke, Baptista, Ninda L., Harvey, James (2023): Contributions to the herpetofauna of the Angolan Okavango- Cuando-Zambezi river drainages. Part 3: Amphibians. Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 325) 17 (1): 19-56, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12761936

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Media Files(2)

Fig. 7. Adult male Breviceps ombelanonga from Cuanavale River source. Photo by Luke Verburgt.

Imageimage/png© Conradie, Werner;Keates, Chad;Verburgt, Luke;Baptista, Ninda L.;Harvey, JamesConradie, Werner;Keates, Chad;Verburgt, Luke;Baptista, Ninda L.;Harvey, James

Map 6. Distribution of Breviceps ombelanonga in Angola.

Imageimage/png© Conradie, Werner;Keates, Chad;Verburgt, Luke;Baptista, Ninda L.;Harvey, JamesConradie, Werner;Keates, Chad;Verburgt, Luke;Baptista, Ninda L.;Harvey, James

IMAGES

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Source Information

Contributions to the herpetofauna of the Angolan Okavango- Cuando-Zambezi river drainages. Part 3: Amphibians

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Conradie, Werner, Keates, Chad, Verburgt, Luke, Baptista, Ninda L., Harvey, James (2023): Contributions to the herpetofauna of the Angolan Okavango- Cuando-Zambezi river drainages. Part 3: Amphibians. Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 325) 17 (1): 19-56, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.12761936

Abstract. —This article is the third and final installment of the herpetofaunal results obtained from a series of rapid biodiversity surveys of the upper Cuito, Cubango, Cuando, Zambezi, and Kwanza River basins in Angola. The amphibian survey results are presented along with an updated checklist of the historical and current records of amphibians from the southeastern region of Angola. A total of 1,114 new amphibian records were documented, comprising 37 species, bringing the total number of recognized amphibian species in this region to 49. These surveys documented two new country records (Hyperolius cf. inyangae and Kassinula wittei) and at least two candidate new species, and elevated Amnirana adiscifera stat. nov. (which now encompasses the western green form formerly regarded as A. darlingi). Finally, updated distribution maps for all of Angola are provided for all the species encountered within the study region.

Conradie W, Keates C, Verburgt L, Baptista N L, Harvey J, felipe (2023). Contributions to the herpetofauna of the Angolan Okavango- Cuando-Zambezi river drainages. Part 3: Amphibians. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/xqyzdr accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-16.

CC0Published 8/4/2023View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
231569731
Dataset Key
5e6c8fd8-74a8-4de2-8687-29b4ea71fac1
Origin
source
Backbone Key
10674834
Taxon ID
4357878800353F5B8B3B6744FD4A04E0.taxon
Last Crawled
6/9/2026
Last Interpreted
6/9/2026