Feihyla hansenae (Cochran, 1927)

Class: Amphibia > Order: Anura > Family: Rhacophoridae > Subfamily: Rhacophorinae > Genus: Feihyla > Species: Feihyla hansenae

English Names

Hansen's Asian Treefrog (Frank and Ramus, 1995, Compl. Guide Scient. Common Names Amph. Rept. World: 111).

Chon Buri Pigmy Tree Frog (Nutphund, 2001, Amph. Thailand: 154).

Hansen's Bushfrog (Chan-ard, 2003, Photograph. Guide Amph. Thailand: 144).

Eastern Bush Frog ( Niyomwan, Srisom, and Pawangkhanant, 2019, Field Guide Amph. Thailand: 394).

Hansen's Bubble-nest Frog (Biju, Garg, Gokulakrishnan, Sivaperuman, Thammachoti, Ren, Gopika, Bisht, Hamidy, and Shouche, 2020, Zootaxa, 4878: 39).

Distribution

Provisional: East-central and southeastern into peninsular Thailand (see comment); presumably in adjacent Cambodia and possibly into southeastern and peninsular Myanmar; possibly into China, Myanmar, and Vietnam (see comment); reported from Sylhet Division, northeastern Bangladesh (see comment).

Geographic Occurrence

Natural Resident: Bangladesh, Cambodia, Thailand

Likely/Controversially Present: China, People's Republic of

Comment

See accounts by Bourret, 1942, Batr. Indochine: 475–476, and (as Philautus hansenae) by Taylor, 1962, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., 43: 526–529. Nutphund, 2001, Amph. Thailand: 154, provided a brief characterization and photograph, which Ohler, 2003, Alytes, 21: 101, attributed to Hyla annectans. Chan-ard, 2003, Photograph. Guide Amph. Thailand: 144–145, provided a very brief account, map for Thailand, and photograph. Stuart and Emmett, 2006, Fieldiana, Zool., N.S., 109: 11, suggested that Chirixalus hansenae may be a junior synonym of Chirixalus vittatusChan-ard, Cota, and Makchai, 2011, Amph. E. Region Thailand: 137, detailed the range, as then understood, in Thailand; on pp. 78–79, provided a photograph and brief account for eastern Thailand. Aowphol, Rujirawan, Taksintum, Arsirapot, and McLeod, 2013, Zootaxa, 3702: 101–123, reported Genbank DQ28313, previously identified as Chiromantis vittatus, to align with Chiromantis hansenae, but did not examine the voucher specimen. These authors also suggested on molecular grounds that nominal Chiromantis hansenae is composed of two lineages from central, eastern, and peninsular Thailand (the nominate form) and montane forests of northwestern Thailand (an unnamed species). These author also found this species to be the sister taxon of Chiromantis vittatus, recently transferred to Feihyla. Yodthong, Siler, Prasankok, and Aowphol, 2014, Asian Herpetol. Res., 5: 179–196, suggested on the basis of molecular evidence that nominal Chiromantis hansenae is composed of two lineages, one in northeastern, eastern and southern Thailand and the other from northwestern and western Thailand. Niyomwan, Srisom, and Pawangkhanant, 2019, Field Guide Amph. Thailand: 394–395, provided a brief account (description, photographs, habitat, and range) for Thailand (in Thai). See comments by Hakim, Trageser, Ghose, Das, Rashid, and Rahman, 2020, Check List, 16: 1239–1268, who reported the species from Lawachara National Park, Sylhet Division, northeastern Bangladesh, although given the recent revision, this is now doubtful (DRF). See account by Biju, Garg, Gokulakrishnan, Sivaperuman, Thammachoti, Ren, Gopika, Bisht, Hamidy, and Shouche, 2020, Zootaxa, 4878: 39–40. Poyarkov, Nguyen, Popov, Geissler, Pawangkhanant, Neang, Suwannapoom, and Orlov, 2021, Russ. J. Herpetol., 28 (3A): 61, suggested that records of Rhacophorus bipunctatus from Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam seem to refer to this species and also suggested that the range extend into China, but did not reference relevant data, literature, or vouchers to support this conjecture. Zug, 2022, Smithson. Contrib. Zool., 653: 45, briefly discussed identification, habitat, and range in Myanmar.

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