Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Ameerega hahneli

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Anura

Genus
  
Ameerega

Higher classification
  
Epipedobates

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Dendrobatidae

Scientific name
  
Epipedobates hahneli

Rank
  
Species

Ameerega hahneli Ameerega hahneli Poison Dart Frogs Dendrobatesorg

Similar
  
Frog, Poison dart frog, Amphibians, Ameerega, Epipedobates

Ameerega hahneli calling


Ameerega hahneli is a species of frog in the Dendrobatidae family. It is found in the Amazonian lowlands of Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, French Guiana, and Suriname. It is named after Paul Hahnel, the collector of the type series.

Contents

Ameerega hahneli Ameerega hahneli Poison Dart Frogs Dendrobatesorg

El llamado de ameerega hahneli


Taxonomy

Ameerega hahneli Ameerega hahneli Understory Enterprises

Ameerega hahneli has been mixed with Ameerega picta, and also considered its synonym. It may represent several species; Ameerega altamazonica has already been split off from the former Ameerega hahneli.

Description

Ameerega hahneli Ameerega videos photos and facts Ameerega hahneli ARKive

Males measure 17–19 mm (0.67–0.75 in) and females 19–22 mm (0.75–0.87 in) in snout–vent length. The back and limbs are finely granular and brown in colour, with or without black spots. The flanks are black and bordered above by a narrow, white or cream coloured dorsolateral line that extends from the tip of the snout to the groin. There is also a white or cream coloured labial stripe that does not extend onto the arm. The venter is blue with black reticulations. There are yellow-orange oval spots on the ventral surfaces of the arms, inner surfaces of the shanks, and in the groin. The iris is dark brown.

Reproduction

Ameerega hahneli CalPhotos Ameerega hahneli Palestriped Poison

Males are territorial. The territorial call is a long series of short "peep" notes, whereas the courtship call is similar but consists of only three notes. Females lay 6-33 pigmented eggs on the leaf-litter. Eggs hatch after 4–16 days and are carried on the back of their father to temporary pools. Tadpoles are brown, with a depressed body, and long tail. They metamorphose after two months.

Habitat and conservation

Ameerega hahneli Flickriver Most interesting photos tagged with hahneli

Ameerega hahneli is a common frog, apart from the Guianas where it is uncommon. It occurs on the forest floor in the tropical rainforest. It is usually associated with fallen palm fronds, branches, and small gaps in the forest. They are active during the day and hide in low vegetation at night.

Ameerega hahneli httpsiucnredlistphotoss3amazonawscommedium

It can be threatened by habitat loss, but the total population is stable and the species is not threatened.

References

Ameerega hahneli Wikipedia