Limnonectes kuhlii (Tschudi, 1838)

Class: Amphibia > Order: Anura > Family: Dicroglossidae > Subfamily: Dicroglossinae > Genus: Limnonectes > Species: Limnonectes kuhlii

Rana kuhlii Tschudi, 1838, Classif. Batr.: 40. Syntypes: "Mus. Lugd." (= RMNH) as originally designated although the number of specimens was not; surviving syntypes are RMNH 4297 (2 specimens) according to Gassó Miracle, van den Hoek Ostende, and Arntzen, 2007, Zootaxa, 1482: 54. In addition, Guibé, 1950 "1948", Cat. Types Amph. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat.: 37, in error regarded MNHNP 4469 (1 specimen on exchange from RMNH) as the holotype but he also regarded the author of the name to be Schlegel in Duméril and Bibron, 1841, Erp. Gen., 6: 384, when this is apparently a subsequent usage as noted by M. S. Hoomoed in Matsui, 1985, in Frost (ed.), Amph. Species World: 498. Type locality: "Java", Indonesia.

Rana palmata Tschudi, 1838, Classif. Batr.: 83. Name attributed to Kuhl and provided as a synonym of Rana kuhlii Tschudi.

Rana (Rana) kuhliBoulenger, 1920, Rec. Indian Mus., 20: 7; Van Kampen, 1923, Amph. Indo-Austral. Arch.: 178.

Dicroglossus kuhliiDeckert, 1938, Sitzungsber. Ges. Naturforsch. Freunde Berlin, 1938: 138.

Rana (Limnonectes) kuhliiDubois, 1981, Monit. Zool. Ital., N.S., Suppl., 15: 239, by implication.

Limnonectes (Limnonectes) kuhliiDubois, 1987 "1986", Alytes, 5: 63.

Limnonectes kuhliiFei, Ye, and Huang, 1990, Key to Chinese Amph.: 153; Fei, 1999, Atlas Amph. China: 204.

English Names

Kuhl's Wart Frog (Frank and Ramus, 1995, Compl. Guide Scient. Common Names Amph. Rept. World: 100).

Kuhl's Creek Frog (Iskandar, 1998, Amph. Java Bali: 74; Das and Dutta, 1998, Hamadryad, 23: 65; Lue, Tu, and Hsiang, 1999, Atlas Taiwan Amph. Rept.: 70; Das, 2007, Amph. Rept. Brunei: 49).

Kuhl's Fanged Frog (Lue, Tu, and Hsiang, 1999, Atlas Taiwan Amph. Rept.: 70).

Large-headed Frog (Fei, 1999, Atlas Amph. China: 204).

Big-headed Mountain Frog (Nutphund, 2001, Amph. Thailand: 132).

Big-headed Frog (Nguyen, Ho, and Nguyen, 2005, Checklist Amph. Rept. Vietnam: 22).

Kuhl's Frog (Nutphund, 2001, Amph. Thailand: 132; Chan-ard, 2003, Photograph. Guide Amph. Thailand: 116; Dinesh, Radhakrishnan, Gururaja, and Bhatta, 2009, Rec. Zool. Surv. India, Occas. Pap., 302: 27).

Kuhl's Broad-headed Frog (Zug, 2022, Smithson. Contrib. Zool., 653: 21).

Distribution

Mountains of Java; populations of closely related, but apparently unnamed species, from Assam (India) to Indochina to the Greater Sundas as far as Sulawesi, Indonesia (see comment).

Geographic Occurrence

Natural Resident: Indonesia

Endemic: Indonesia

Comment

Literature addressing populations outside of Java all apply to other named and unnamed species in the group. In the Limnonectes (Limnonectes) kuhlii group of Dubois, 1987 "1986", Alytes, 5: 63. See Boulenger, 1920, Rec. Indian Mus., 20: 62; Taylor, 1962, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull., 43: 408–412; Okada, 1931, Tailless Batr. Japan. Empire: 160–162; Bourret, 1942, Batr. Indochine: 278–282; Pope, 1931, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 61: 495–499; and Inger, 1966, Fieldiana, Zool., 52: 196–202, for discussion and review. See also Berry, 1975, Amph. Fauna Peninsular Malaysia: 71–72. Inger and Tan, 1996, Raffles Bull. Zool., 44: 559, cite a personal communication from Iskandar that Bornean populations are not conspecific with Javan populations, and that the Bornean population may be a composite, and Iskandar, 1998, Amph. Java Bali: 74–75, discussed the species and considered it restricted to the mountains of Java. Fei, 1999, Atlas Amph. China: 204–205, provided a brief account for the Chinese population, map, and figure. Emerson, Inger, and Iskandar, 2000, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol., 16: 131–142, suggested that nominal Limnonectes kuhlii is composed of at least four species which likely are not even each others' closest relatives: Taiwan (populations now assigned to Limnonectes fujianensis), Sabah plus Brunei, Endau plus Thailand, and Kuala Lumpur. On the basis of an mtDNA study of phylogeny, Zhang, Nie, Peng, Ge, Wang, Xu, and Tang, 2005, Acta Zool. Sinica, 51: 354–359, placed populations from Borneo most closely related to Limnonectes asperatus, the population from Taiwan most closely related to Limnonectes fujianensis, and another, genetically remote population in Yunnan. Inasmuch as the type locality is Java, it is unclear whether the name applies to any of these entities. Yang, 1991, Amph. Fauna of Yunnan: 129–131, discussed a frog allied to this species from China. Chanda, 2002, Handb. Indian Amph.: 116–119, provided a brief account (as Rana kuhlii). See brief account and photo by Manthey and Grossmann, 1997, Amph. Rept. Südostasiens: 95–96. Huang, 1990, Fauna Zhejiang, Amph. Rept.: 61–62, provided an account (as Rana kuhlii) for Zhejiang populations. See also brief account (as Rana kuhlii) of a similar species by Zhao and Yang, 1997, Amph. Rept. Hengduan Mountains Region: 27. Malkmus, Manthey, Vogel, Hoffmann, and Kosuch, 2002, Amph. Rept. Mount Kinabalu: 142–144, provided an account for the Bornean population. Stuart, 1999, in Duckworth et al. (eds.), Wildlife in Lao PDR: 45, reported the species in Laos along with a concern for existing taxonomic confusion. Chan-ard, 2003, Photograph. Guide Amph. Thailand: 116–117, provided a very brief account, map for Thailand, and photograph (although the account presumably included Limnonectes megastomias, unnamed at the time). Nguyen, Ho, and Nguyen, 2005, Checklist Amph. Rept. Vietnam: 22, provided specific localities for Vietnam and (p. 148) a photograph. Stuart, Sok, and Neang, 2006, Raffles Bull. Zool., 54: 138, provided a record for Cambodia. Lue, Tu, and Hsiang, 1999, Atlas Taiwan Amph. Rept.: 70–71, provided a brief account for Taiwan (as Rana kuhlii). Sarkar and Ray, 2006, In Alfred (ed.), Fauna of Arunachal Pradesh, Part 1: 296, provided a brief account (as Rana kuhlii) for Arunachal Pradesh, northeastern India. See comment under Limnonectes bannaensis. Das, Jankowski, Makmor, and Haas, 2007, Mitt. Hamburg. Zool. Mus. Inst., 104: 150–151, provided a brief description. Das and Dutta, 2007, Hamadryad, 31: 154–181, noted several larval descriptions of varying levels of completeness in the literature. McLeod, 2008, Zootaxa, 1807: 26–26, named Limnonectes megastomias from within nominal Limnonectes kuhlii and provided additional evidence for cryptic species under this name. Neang and Holden, 2008, Field Guide Amph. Cambodia: 94, provided a photograph, brief account of identification, ecology, and range in Cambodia. Yang, 2008, in Yang and Rao (ed.), Amph. Rept. Yunnan: 68–69, provided a brief account (as Rana kuhlii) for Yunnan, China. Das, 2007, Amph. Rept. Brunei: 49, provided a photograph and brief account. Mathew and Sen, 2010, Pict. Guide Amph. NE India: 37–38, provided a brief characterization and photograph of the species that goes under this name in northeastern India. Grismer, Chan, Grismer, Wood, and Ahmad, 2010, Russ. J. Herpetol., 17: 147–160, reported localities from the Banjaran Bintang Mountains, northwestern peninsular Malaysia. McLeod, 2010, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol., 56: 991–1000, suggested that nominal Limnonectes kuhlii is composed of an aggregation of not-particularly-closely-related species, implying that application of this name to any population outside of Java is likely to be in error. Thai populations were allocated to other species (Limnonectes jarujini, Limnonectes taylori) by Matsui, Panha, Khonsue, and Kuraishi, 2010, Zootaxa, 2615: 1–22, and who discussed the results of McLeod (2010) insofar as they applied to Thai populations. See Limnonectes siskdagu, which is another recent segregate. Matsui, Dubois, and Ohler, 2013, Asian Herpetol. Res., Ser. 2, 4: 187–189, discussed nomenclatural issues and suggested that Rana paradoxa Mocquard, 1889, and Rana conspicillata Günther, 1872, were not conspecific with each other or with Rana kuhlii Tschudi, 1838 (sensu stricto), but did not address the systematics in a detailed fashion; clearly Limnonectes kuhlii is a composite, will be dissected in the future, and the nomenclatural care this paper represents will make that considerably easier. See comments under Limnonectes selatan and Limnonectes utaraSumarli, Grismer, Anuar, Muin, and Quah, 2015, Check List, 11(4, Art. 1679): 8, reported specimens from Mount Tebu, Terregganu, West Malaysia, and and reported on their morphology and habitat. Matsui, Kuraishi, Eto, Hamidy, Nishikawa, Shimada, Yambun Imbun, Vairappan, and Hossman, 2016, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol., 102: 305–319, noted that, on the basis of DNA analysis, that 16 unnamed species, some close to Limnonectes hikidai and other close to Limnonectes cintalubang, but all formerly referred to nominal Limnonectes kuhlii remain to be named from Borneo alone. Do, Ngo, and Nguyen, 2017, Hue Univ. J. Sci: Nat. Sci., 126: 91, noted that earlier records from Phu Yen Province, Vietnam, are referrable to Limnonectes bannaensisDehling and Dehling, 2017, Zootaxa, 4317: 291–309, for discussion of the turbulent systematics of the Limnonectes kuhlii complex. Haas, Kueh, Joseph, bin Asri, Das, Hagmann, Schwander, and Hertwig, 2018, Evol. Syst., 2: 89–114, provided a brief account of morphology and natural history for the unnamed Sabah population. Zainudin and Naim, 2018, Malaysian Appl. Biol., 47: 73–80, reported on geographic variation of 16S mtDNA within and among unnamed species (as Limnonectes kuhlii) in western Borneo. See brief account for East Java by Amin, 2020, Frogs of East Java: 68–71. Zug, 2022, Smithson. Contrib. Zool., 653: 21, briefly discussed identification, habitat, and range of Limnonectes 'kuhlii" in Myanmar.  Herlambang, Riyanto, Munir, Hamidy, Kimura, Eto, and Mumpuni, 2022, Treubia, 49: 78, noted a record of this species from Serasan I., Natuna Is., Indonesia. Fahmi, Kadafi, Priambodo, Fauzi, Hamidy, Firdaus, Smith, and Kurniawan, 2023, J. Exp. Life Sci., 13: 145–152, reported on the diversity of mtDNA matrilines in Java and Sumatra, Indonesia, noting 6 lineages in two groups of which their lineage 6 (group B) corresponds to Limnonectes kuhlii, lineage 1 (group A) to Limnonectes siskidagu and four others unnamed pending further investigation. 

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