The Peninsula de Paria
in extreme northeastern Venezuela is an extension of a chain of high coastal
mountains (elevations ~2800m) that span much of northern Venezuela and extends
into the adjacent islands of Trinidad. The fauna of Tobago is also related to
the Peninsula de Paria but from a different history. This region has been
variously called the Cordillera de la Costa or the Coastal Range and the
eastern continental extension has received minimal attention from
herpetologists. Donoso-Barros (1965) reported survey results from Cerro Azul
and described Mannophryne riveroi (Donoso-Barros,
1965a), the first endemic frog from the area, followed by Gonatodes ceciliae in 1966, the first endemic lizard - which is now
also recognized from Trinidad. Stephen Edwards explored Cerro Azul and
recognized a distinctive frog described many years later as Mannophryne venezuelensis by Manzanilla et al. (2007). Two centrolenid frogs, Celsiella vozmedianoi (Ayarzagüena &
Señaris, 1997) and Vitreorana
castroviejoi (Ayarzagüena & Señaris, 1997), were discovered on Cerro
Humo. Rivas et al. (1999) described
the microteiid Anadia pariaensis,
Mijares-Urrutia et al. (2000)
described the gymnophthalmid lizard Euspondylus
monsfumus, and Barrio-Amorós et al.
(2006) named Allobates caribe, all
from the same area. Other herpetologists visited the Península de Paria and
made important collections (e.g., Stefan Gorzula in 1978, Jose Ayarzagüena in 1996)
but no additional species have been described from their material. With the
completion of more extensive collections by several Venezuelan and
international research teams, additional species and observations on poorly
known species were recently published (e.g., Anadia pariaensis—Rivas et al.
2012; Strabomantis biporcatus—Barrio-Amorós & Kaiser 2008; Mannophryne riveroi—Barrio-Amorós et al. 2010a; Riama rhodogaster—Rivas et al.
2005; Taeniophallus nebularis
Schargel et al. 2005).
In a recent paper Kaiser
et al, (2015) reported on fieldwork
in the cloud forest of Venezuela’s remote Península de Paria in 2001 resulted
in the collection of several specimens that could unquestionably be classified
as members of the genus Pristimantis.
Subsequent analysis of comparative material in museum collections brought the
total number of specimens to 44, and these collectively represent five new
species. Two of these species, P. geminus
and P. nubisilva have phenotypes
remarkably similar to the Trinidadian P.
urichi, supporting a prediction that Pristimantis
from easternmost Venezuela may have given rise to Trinidadian forms. Pristimantis hoogmoedi is easily
identified by its large size and red eyes. Two of the species, P. longicorpus and P. pariagnomus, are very distinct morphologically but are known
only from the holotypes. The former is characterized by an elongate body form
supported by relatively short limbs, whereas the latter has very distinctive
hand morphology and is likely the smallest Venezuelan frog. All five species
can be readily distinguished by their osteology, such as by the extent of the
sphenethmoid and features on the roof of the mouth, as well as by the shape and
rearrangement of mesopodial elements. The unexpectedly high diversity of Pristimantis in this region, along with
high endemism of amphibians and reptiles in general, underscores the position
of the Península de Paria as a center for frog biodiversity in Venezuela. The
authors conclude that the similarity of these Paria species to Pristimantis from Trinidad, Tobago and
the central Cordillera de la Costa represents a tangible piece of evidence for
the close biogeographic link of the anuran fauna of these landmasses.
The Trinidad and Tobago
herpetofauna is more diverse than previously thought. By previously I mean
post-Kenny (1969-1979), post-Murphy (1997), post-Boos (2001). Each of those
works were a snapshot of what we knew at the time but knowledge changes.
Species recently
described or ones that have been resurrected from obscurity on Trinidad and
Tobago are numerous, and include the following. Frogs: The Orinoco Basin Dendropsophus goughi (Boulenger) was
formerly the widespread D. minuta. Scarthyla vigilans was recently reported
from Trinidad by Smith et al. (2011).
While it may have been a recent colonization, it is also possible it was simply
over looked because it so closely resembles the widespread Scinax ruber. Leptodactylus insularis was formerly L. bolivianus (Heyer and Heyer, 2013).
Changes in lizards. The skink Mabuya
falconensis is now Marisora aurulae
Hedges & Conn, 2012, a species with a very small distribution on several
islands and known from few specimens. And the skink, once thought to be the
widespread Mabuya bistriata is now Copeoglossum aurae Hedges & Conn,
2012, with a very restricted distribution. The Trinidad zandolie which was once
thought to be the widespread Ameiva
ameiva is now the Caribbean Costal Range endemic Ameiva atrigularis (Ugueto et
al. 2011). The once widespread Plica
plica is now the Caribbean Costal Range endemic Plica caribeana (Murphy and Jowers, 2013). As for snakes the
endemic Leptophis haileyi was added
to the fauna of Tobago by Murphy et al.
Dipsas variegata was added to the
Trinidad fauna by Murphy and Rutherford (2014). Teddy Angarita-Sierra (2014)
added the snake Ninia franciscoi,
which has only been collected at Simla, in the Arima Valley, but may also be
present in the Caribbean Coastal Range.
So if I made a list of
the number of species that need name changes or descriptions (because they are
undescribed) I am confident the list would contain twelve species. If I
estimate the number of actual changes that are probably needed the number goes
to at least twenty, about a quarter of the herpetofauna.
With these changes
widespread species become less widespread, there are more endemic and near
endemic species and the fauna becomes more specialized and more diverse. In
short it becomes a more valuable resource in terms of culture, conservation, aesthetics,
and science.
These changes don’t
happen for free. They are funded by private and public money. If you are
interested in supporting this research contact me at serpentresearch@gmail.com. We need
funding for several projects.
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