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The biology of the Pe-ret' Toad, Otophryne robusta- (Microhylidae), with special consideration of its fossorial larva and systematic relationships
Authors:RICHARD J WASSERSUG  WILLIAM F PYBURN
Institution:Department of Anatomy, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4H7;Department of Biology, The University of Texas, Arlington, Texas, 76019 U.S.A.
Abstract:Adult and larval Otophryne robusta- were collected in Colombia, South America. Although this genus has been assigned to the family Microhylidae, a variety of both adult and larval features distinguish it from all other microhylids. The adult is a diurnally active leaf mimic with complex agonistic behaviours and vocalizations. It tends to walk rather than hop, and does not burrow in captivity. The larva is unique in having minute, dagger-like, keratinized teeth and a sinistral spiracle at the tip of a long tube. The mature larva lives shallowly buried in sand at the bottom of clear, shallow streams. The anatomy of the tadpole was examined for clues to how it burrows into and survives in sand, as well as to the correct phylogenetic association of the genus. Internally, the tadpole is most similar to microhylid tadpoles and has a wealth of oral features (e.g. unperforated internal nares, branchial food traps arranged in crescentic organs, ventral velum divided on the midline, glottis located rostral to the free edge of the ventral velum, large gill filters etc.) that characterize that family. Most, if not all, of the unique features of the Otophryne larva can be associated with its fossorial existence. The arrangement of the muscles suggest that it can actively raise and lower its snout during burrowing and possibly dorsiflex its head on its vertebral column. Although the larval teeth first suggest carnivory, many features indicate that maerophagy is not possible. Stomach contents include a variety of bacteria and micro-organisms, but no fragments of macroscopic animals. We conclude that the Otophryne tadpole is a microphagous suspension feeder and its teeth are more important for keeping sand grains out of its mouth than for grasping prey. Since the O. robusta larva does not burrow deeply, the tip of its spiracular tube probably extends upward above the sandy bottom and into the current. In this position pressure would be lower at the spiracle than at the mouth and a current could be passively drawn (by the Bernoulli effect) through the oral cavity for feeding and respiration. If this is correct then the Otophryne larva is the first fossorial vertebrate known to passively filter-feed. All features of the tadpole, except the keratinized teeth and sinistral spiracle, indicate an affinity of Otophryne-/i with South American microhylids. The tadpole and adult are, however, so unusual as to warrant subfamilial status+ADs- we propose the subfamily Otophryninac for this monotypic genus.
Keywords:Anura —  Microhylidae —  tadpoles —  iOtophryne-/i —  anuran larvae  
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