Over-arching philosophy of this project with comments on the higher taxonomy employed

With the appearance of six publications (Chippindale et al., 2004; Faivovich et al., 2005; Macey, 2005; Frost et al., 2006; and Grant et al., 2006; Roelants et al., 2007), amphibian systematics moved substantially towards a taxonomy consistent with evolutionary relationships. Concomitantly, we entered a period of nomenclatural instability in which workers will rush to tie up all of the loose ends that are no longer concealed by nonmonophyletic groupings (e.g., the older senses of Pseudoeurycea, Plethodontinae, Bufo, Hyla, Hyperoliidae, Leptodactylidae, Eleutherodactylinae, Rana, Hylarana, Ranidae, Microhylidae, and Caeciliinae). Because taxonomic stability must be an artifact of understanding, not authoritarian decree, I think this instability reflects the health of amphibian systematics as a scientific endeavor driven by evidence and not something that makes systematics a "laughingstock" of science (Wake, 2006 [cf. Sokal and Sneath, 1963]; for more scientific views of this issue see Dominguez and Wheeler, 1997, and Grant and Kluge, 2005). Adherence to nonevolutionary/nonmonophyletic groups by social compact would be quaintly anachronistic were it not such a threat to progress in systematics research.

Over the next several years there will be considerable discussion of the higher taxonomy of amphibians. This will include nomenclatural discussions of how best to name evolutionary groups as well as more important discussions of epistemology, evidence, and analytical methods as they impact inferential biology. Throughout the ensuing debate, it will be important to distinguish legitimate scientific disagreements grounded in evidence and analysis from authoritarian posturing based only on opinion and deference to "tradition" and social conservativeness. This kind of resistance will rest largely on nonscientific propaganda and innuendo. Nevertheless, what should come out of the scientific exercises associated with the controversies will be a huge increase in the amount of evidence and the number of explicitly tested phylogenetic hypotheses, as well as more philosophically rigorous discussions of analytical methods and their underlying justifications.

Even though I have been part of this recent push towards monophyly in amphibian taxonomy, my ongoing objective is to continue to update ASW as evidence accumulates and the current phylogenetic hypotheses (e.g., Chippindale et al., 2004; Faivovich et al., 2005; Macey, 2005; Frost et al., 2006; and Grant et al., 2006) are refined or refuted by additional evidence.

A comparison of the family-group names applied in ASW versions 3.0 and subsequently in 4.0 and 5.0 provides a general road-map for the number of changes in amphibian taxonomy made in the recent past.

Version 3.0 (2004) families and subfamilies

Versions 4.0 (2006) and 5.0 (2007) families and subfamilies Notes and explanations
Anura
Allophrynidae Centrolenidae: Allophrynidae Placed as a subfamily of Centrolenidae by Frost et al., 2006, to reflect the sister taxon relationship of Allophryne ruthveni with the traditional Centrolenidae.
Arthroleptidae Arthroleptini (roughly) of Arthroleptidae: Arthroleptinae Frost et al., 2006, placed former Arthroleptidae, Astylosternidae, and Leptopelinae (formerly in Hyperoliidae) into a reformulated Arthroleptidae, containing two subfamilies Arthroleptinae (for former Arthroleptidae [sensu stricto] and Astylosternidaee) and Leptopelinae (for a taxon formerly attached to Hyperoliidae).
Ascaphidae Leiopelmatidae Frost et al., 2006, returned Ascaphus to Leiopelmatidae to reflect the sister-taxon relationship of Ascaphus and Leiopelma.
Astylosternidae Arthroleptidae: Arthroleptinae See comment under Arthroleptidae.
Bombinatoridae Bombinatoridae
Brachycephalidae Brachycephalidae Frost et al., 2006, following Dubois, 2005, severely modified the content of this formerly small group by the inclusion of the former Eleutherodactylinae. Heinicki et al., 2007, severely revised the genetic concepts on the basis of molecular data.
Bufonidae Bufonidae Frost et al., 2006, rendered a number of generic rearrangements to render a monophyletic Bufo and to formulate a taxonomy that invites additional work.
Frost et al., 2006, by inclusion of Allophryidae as a subfamily of Centrolenidae, rendered the former content of Centrolenidae equal to the new subfamily Centroleninae.
Dendrobatidae Aromobatidae and Dendrobatidae Grant et al., 2006, rendered extensive changes to the generic taxonomy of former Dendrobatidae (now Dendrobatoidea) and considered it to be composed of sister families, Aromobatidae and Dendrobatidae.
Discoglossidae Alytidae Following Dubois, 2005, Frost et al., 2006, used the name of priority for this taxon.
Heleophrynidae Heleophrynidae
Hemisotidae Hemisotidae
Hylidae: Hemiphractinae Amphignathodontidae, Cryptobatrachidae, and Hemiphractidae, Darst and Cannatella, 2004; Faivovich et al., 2005, and Wiens et al., 2005, showed that Hemiphractinae was not in Hylidae. Frost et al., 2006, recognized former Hemiphractidae as three families phylogenetically distant from each other.
Hylidae: Hylinae Hylinae: Hylinae Faivovich et al., 2005, rendered extensive generic changes to render a monophyletic taxonomy.
Hylidae: Pelodryadinae Hylinae: Pelodryadinae Frost et al., 2006, placed Cyclorana and Nyctimystes in the synonymy of Litoria to render a monophyletic taxonomy.
Hylidae: Phyllomedusinae Hylinae: Phyllomedusinae Faivovich et al., 2005, rendered generic changes to render a monophyletic taxonomy.
Hyperoliidae: Hyperoliinae Hyperoliidae Frost et al., 2006, rendered former Hyperoliinae as coextensive with Hyperoliidae by transfer of Leptopelinae to Arthroleptidae.
Hyperoliidae: Leptopelinae Arthroleptidae: Leptopelinae See comment under Arthroleptidae.
Leiopelmatidae Leiopelmatidae Frost et al., 2006, reincluded Ascaphidae in Leiopelmatidae.
Leptodactylidae: Ceratophryinae Ceratophryidae (part) and Cycloramphidae (part) Ceratophryini was transferred by Frost et al., 2006, to a reformulated Ceratophryidae; they also transferred Odontophrynini into a reformulated Cycloramphidae.
Leptodactylidae: Cycloramphinae Leptodactylidae (part), Hylodidae, and Cyclramphidae Frost et al., 2006, transferred Scythrophrys and Paratelmatobius into Leptodactylidae from former Cycloramphinae; their reformulated Cycloramphidae contained the remainder of the former Cycloramphinae + Rhinodermatidae + part of Telmatobiinae, except for Thoropa, which they placed in a new family, Thoropidae. Grant et al., 2006, recognized that Thoropidae is in Cycloramphidae, but excluded Hylodidae (Cycloramphidae: Hylodinae of Frost et al., 2006) from Cycloramphidae sensu Frost et al., 2006, to render a monophyletic taxonomy.
Leptodactylidae: Eleutherodactylinae Brachycephalidae (part) See comment under Brachycephalidae.
Leptodactylidae: Leptodactylinae Leptodactylidae (redelimited), Leiuperidae Frost et al., 2006, included the former cycloramphines Paratelmatobius and Scythrophrys in Leptodactylidae but otherwise treated former Leptodactylinae as a family. Grant et al., 2006, showed that Leptodactylidae sensu Frost et al., 2006, is polyphyletic, composed to two families: Leptodactylidae (for Hydrolaetare, Leptodactylus, Paratelmatobius, and Scythrophrys) and Leiuperidae (for Edalorhina, Engystomops, Eupemphix, Physalameus, Pleurodema, Pseudopaludicola,and Somuncuria).
Leptodactylidae: Telmatobiinae Calyptocephalellidae, Ceratophryidae (part), Cycloramphidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, showed that former Telmatobiinae is polyphyletic, with one group (Calyptocephalellidae [Batrachophrynidae in their work]) most close to the myobatrachoids, another group (Telmatobius, Batrachyla, and Atelognathus) most closely related to former Ceratophryini in a reformulated Ceratophryidae, and another group (including Hylorina, Alsodes, and Eupsophus) in a reformulated Cycloramphinae. Aguilar and Pacheco, 2005, and Cordova and Descailleaux, 2005, demonstrated that Batrachophrynus is in Ceratophryidae, leaving the remainder of "Batrachophrynidae" as Calyptocephalellidae
Limnodynastidae Limnodynastidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, transferred Mixophyes from Limnodynastidae into Myobatrachidae.
Mantellidae: Boophinae Mantellidae: Boophinae
Mantellidae: Laliostominae Mantellidae: Mantellinae: Laliostomini (vers. 4.0); Mantellidae: Laliostominae (vers. 5.0) Frost et al., 2006, considered Mantellinae and Laliostominae as tribes within a reformulated Mantellinae. Glaw and Vences, 2006, provided an extensively reformulated Mantellidae and retained the three-subfamily arrangement without rejecting the evidence or tree of Frost et al., 2006
Mantellidae: Mantellinae Mantellidae: Mantellinae: Mantellini (vers. 4.0); Mantellidae: Mantellinae (vers. 5.0) See comment under Laliostominae.
Megophryidae Megophryidae
Microhylidae: Asterophryinae Microhylidae: Asterophryinae Frost et al., 2006, placed Genyophryninae as a synonym of Asterophryinae to prevent the paraphyly of Genyophryninae.
Microhylidae: Brevicipitinae Brevicipitidae Frost et al., 2006, recognized Brevicipitidae as a family, phylogenetically distant from Microhylidae.
Microhylidae: Cophylinae Microhylidae: Cophylinae
Microhylidae: Dyscophinae Microhylidae: Dyscophinae
Microhylidae: Genyophryninae Microhylidae: Asterophryinae (part) See comment under Microhylidae: Asterophryinae.
Microhylidae: Melanobatrachinae Microhylidae: Melanobatrachinae Frost et al., 2006, retained Melanobatrachinae, but noted that its content will likely change substantially with additional work.
Microhylidae: Microhylinae Microhylidae (several incertae sedis genera), Microhylidae: Microhylinae, and Microhylidae: Gastrophryninae Frost et al., 2006, demonstrated that former Microhylinae is polyphyletic. They recognized a monophyletic Microhylinae and Gastrophryninae, but excluded severa genera from either subfamily and placed them incertae sedis at the level of Microhylidae.
Microhylidae: Phrynomerinae Microhylidae (see comment) Frost et al., 2006, did not recognize Phrynomerinae for Phrynomantis. Retained in this catalog.
Microhylidae: Scaphiophryninae Microhylidae: Scaphiophryninae (see comment) Frost et al., 2006, followed Haas, 2004, in excluding Paradoxophyla from this taxon, placing it incertae sedis within Microhylidae. Van der Meijden et al. (2007) subsequently showed Paradoxophyla to be a scaphiophrynine.
Myobatrachidae Myobatrachidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, reformulated Myobatrachidae by placing Rheobatrachus and Mixophyes in this group. Roelants et al. (2006) suggested that Mixophyes is a limnodynastine; the jury is out on this.
Nasikabatrachidae Sooglossidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, placed Nasikabatrachidae in Sooglossidae, although Roelants et al. (2006) continued its recognition.
Pelobatidae Pelobatidae
Pelodytidae Pelodytidae
Petropedetidae Petropedetidae (reformulated) and Ranixalidae Frost et al., 2006, reformulated Petropedetidae to exclude Phrynobatrachidae, and to include Conraua and Indirana. Roelants et al. (2006) on the basis of additional evidence removed Indirana to its own family, Ranixalidae
Pipidae: Dactylethrinae Pipidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, rejected subfamilies within Pipidae.
Pipidae: Pipinae Pipidae (part) See comment under Pipidae: Dactylethrinae.
Rhacophoridae: Buergeriinae Rhacophoridae: Buergeriinae
Rhacophoridae: Rhacophorinae Rhacophoridae: Rhacophorinae
Rheobatrachidae Myobatrachidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, placed Rheobatrachus in Myobatrachidae
Rhinodermatidae Cycloramphidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, placed Rhinodermatidae in a newly demarcated Cycloramphidae.
Rhinophrynidae Rhinophrynidae
Scaphiopodidae Scaphiopodidae
Sooglossidae Sooglossidae (part) See comment under Nasikabatrachidae.
Urodela Caudata Frost et al., 2006, explained the nomenclatural change.
Ambystomatidae Ambystomatidae (part) See comment under Dicamptodontidae.
Amphiumidae Amphiumidae
Cryptobranchidae Cryptobranchidae
Dicamptodontidae Ambystomatidae Frost et al., 2006, replaced Dicamptodon as the sister taxon of Ambystoma, within Ambystomatidae.
Hynobiidae Hynobiidae
Plethodontidae: Desmognathinae Plethodontidae: Plethodontinae (part) Chippindale et al. (2004) and Macey (2005) provided a monophyletic taxonomy of Plethodontidae that does not resemble the older, nonevolutionary taxonomy.
Plethodontidae: Plethodontinae Plethodontidae: Bolitoglossinae, Plethodontidae: Hemidactyliinae, and Plethodontidae: Spelerpinae See comment under Plethodontidae; Desmognathinae.
Proteidae Proteidae
Rhyacotritonidae Rhyacotritonidae
Salamandridae Salamandridae: Pleurodelinae, and Salamandridae: Salamandrinae Frost et al., 2006, recognized two subfamilies within Salamandridae.
Sirenidae Sirenidae
Gymnophiona Gymnophiona
Caeciliidae: Caeciliinae Caeciliidae (part) Frost et al,. 2006, rejected the use of Caeciliinae as paraphyletic.
Caeciliidae: Typhlonectinae Caeciliidae: Typhlonectinae
Ichthyophiidae Ichthyophiidae See comment under Uraeotyphlidae.
Rhinatrematidae Rhinatrematidae
Scolecomorphidae Caeciliidae: Scolecomorphinae Frost et al., 2006, placed Scolecomorphidae as a subfamily of Caeciliidae.
Uraeotyphlidae Ichthyophiidae (part) Frost et al., 2006, placed Uraeotyphlidae into the synonymy of Ichthyophiidae.

Literature Cited

Aguilar, C. and V. Pacheco. 2005. Contribución de la morfología bucofaríngea larval a la filogenia de Batrachophrynus y Telmatobius. In E.O. Lavilla and I. De la Riva (eds.), Estudio sobre las rana andinas de los géneros Telmatobius y Batrachophrynus (Anura: Leptodactylidae). Monografías de Herpetología, 7: 219-238.

Chippindale, P.T., R.M. Bonett, A.S. Baldwin, and J.J. Wiens. 2004. Phylogenetic evidence for a major reversal of life-history evolution in plethodontid salamanders. Evolution 58: 2809-2822.

Córdova, J.H. and J. Descailleaux. 2005. El análisis cladistico preliminar de los cariotipos de cinco especies de Telmatobius y dos de Batrachophrynus no apoya su separación genérica. In E.O. Lavilla and I. De la Riva (eds.), Estudio sobre las rana andinas de los géneros Telmatobius y Batrachophrynus (Anura: Leptodactylidae). Monografías de Herpetología, 7: 187-217.

Dominguez, E. and Q.D. Wheeler. 1997. Taxonomic stability is ignorance. Cladistics 13: 367-372

Faivovich, J., C.F.B., Haddad, P.C.A. Garcia, D.R. Frost, J.A. Campbell., and W.C. Wheeler. 2005. Systematic review of the frog family Hylidae, with special reference to Hylinae: a phylogenetic analysis and taxonomic revision. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 294: 1-240.

Frost, D.R., T. Grant, J. Faivovich, R.H. Bain, A. Haas, C.F.B. Haddad, R.O de Sa, A. Channing, M. Wilkinson, S.C. Donnellan, C. Raxworthy, J.A. Campbell., B.L. Blotto, P. Moler, R.C. Drewes, R.A. Nussbaum, J.D. Lynch, D.M. Green, and W.C. Wheeler. 2006. The amphibian tree of life. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 297: 1-370.

Glaw, F. and M. Vences. 2006. Phylogeny and genus-level classification of mantellid frogs (Amphibia, Anura). Organisms, Diversity & Evolution 6: 236-253.

Grant, T., D.R. Frost, J.P. Caldwell, R. Gagliardo, C.F.B. Haddad, P.J.R. Kok, B.D. Means, B.D. Means, B.P. Noonan, W. Schargel, and W.C. Wheeler. 2006. Phylogenetic systematics of dart-poison frogs and their relatives (Amphibia: Athesphatanura: Dendrobatoidea). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 299: 1-262.

Grant, T., and A.G. Kluge. 2005. Stability, sensitivity, science and heurism. Cladistics 21: 597-605.

Heinicke, M. P., W. E. Duellman, and S. B. Hedges. 2007. Major Caribbean and Central American frog faunas originated by ancient oceanic dispersal. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 104: 10092-97.

Macey, J.R. 2005. Plethodontid salamander mitochondrial genomics: a parsimony evaluation of character conflict and implications for historical biogeography. Cladistics 21: 194-202.

Roelants, K., D.J. Gower, M. Wilkinson, S.P. Loader, S.D. Biju, K. Guillaume, L. Moriau, and F. Bossuyt. 2007. Global patterns of diversification in the history of modern amphibians. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104: 887-892.

Sokal, R.R., and P.H.A. Sneath. 1963. Principles of Numerical Taxonomy. Freeman & Sons, San Francisco.

Van der Meijden, A., M. Vencens, S. Hoegg, R. Boistel, A. Channing, and A. Meyer. 2007. Nuclear gene phylogeny of narrow-mouthed toads (family Microhylidae) and a discussion of competing hypotheses concerning their biogeographical origins. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. In press.

Wake, D.B. 2006. Quotation in Anonymous, "Hoppers and creepers treed". Science 312: 31.

Wiens, J.J., J.W. Fetzner, C.L. Parkinson, and T.W. Reeder. 2005. Hylid frog phylogeny and sampling strategies for speciose clades. Systematic Biology 54: 719-748.

© 1998-2007, Darrel Frost and The American Museum of Natural History. All Rights Reserved.
Send questions about taxonomic data to Darrel Frost <frost at amnh org>.
Send technical inquiries about functionality of site or database to Mark Breedlove <markb at amnh org>

Valid HTML 4.01!