Leptomantis Belalongensis
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''Leptomantis belalongensis'' is a species of frog in the family Rhacophoridae.


Distribution and taxonomy

''Leptomantis belalongensis'' is endemic to the Temburong District of Brunei. It occurs only in several small tributaries of the Sungai Temburong and Sungai Belalong rivers, in the area of their
confluence In geography, a confluence (also: ''conflux'') occurs where two or more flowing bodies of water join to form a single channel. A confluence can occur in several configurations: at the point where a tributary joins a larger river (main stem); o ...
. The frog's
specific name Specific name may refer to: * in Database management systems, a system-assigned name that is unique within a particular database In taxonomy, either of these two meanings, each with its own set of rules: * Specific name (botany), the two-part (bino ...
refers to the latter river; the Latin suffix ''-ensis'' means "originating in". Its closest relatives include '' Rhacophorus bimaculatus'', ''
Rhacophorus catamitus ''Rhacophorus catamitus'' is a species of frogs in the family Rhacophoridae. It is endemic to Sumatra, Indonesia, and occurs in the Barisan Mountains at elevations of above sea level. Its natural habitats are tropical forests. Males call from lo ...
'', '' Rhacophorus gadingensis'', and '' Rhacophorus gauni''.


Description

''Leptomantis belalongensis'' is a small, slender frog with a narrow waist. When adult, males measure 38.2 to 30.9 millimeters, and females 34.7 to 25.8 millimeters. The head's width is greater than both its length and the width of the body. The snout is obtuse, with teeth on the upper jawbone, and the
canthal ridge In snakes and amphibians, the canthus, canthal ridge or ''canthus rostralis'',Spawls S, Branch B. 1995. ''The Dangerous Snakes of Africa''. Ralph Curtis Books. Dubai: Oriental Press. 192 pp. . is the angle between the flat crown of the head and the ...
is sharp. The loreal region is sloping and oblique, and the nostrils are located closer to the tip of the stout than to the eyes. The irises of the large, protruding eyes are ruby-coloured, diffusing to yellow laterally with a distinct black ring along the margin. The diameter of the faintly visible tympanum equals one-third of that of the eye. The arms are moderately slender. A characteristic row of small white tubercles can be seen on each forearm. The four fingers are slightly webbed, and their tips are oval and broad, with the disk of the third and the longest finger wider than the tympanum; each tip possesses a circummarginal groove. The legs are slender and fairly long, with the tibiotarsal joint reaching the tip of the vent. A large pointed calcar is present on each heel. The disks of the five, fairly webbed toes, of which the fourth one is the longest, are smaller than those of the fingers. Each digit possesses one to three subarticular tubercles, well developed on the fingers. Several tubercles are present on the hands and the feet, with the biggest one located at the base of the thumb. Other characteristics of the species include the lack of a dermal flap along the forearm, and a weakly expressed or absent supratympanic fold. The skin on the back, dotted with small tubercles, as well as on the abdomen and the ventral side of the thighs is granular; it is smooth on the chin, the throat and the chest. The dorsum is light brown to grey, almost regularly speckled with small dark brown irregularly shaped spots; on the flanks and the anterior surfaces of the thighs can be seen irregularly shaped sky blue blotches. The venter is white.


Ecology and behaviour

''Leptomantis belalongensis'' can be found on vegetation, next to small, fast-flowing rivulets, usually at one to three meters above the ground; some males, however, were heard calling from as high as ten meters. The advertisement calls consist of one to three, usually two, short clicks, given at irregular intervals. The eggs are deposited within foam nests, as big as 38.4 mm x 26.9 mm x 9.1 mm and attached to the surface of leaves. The number of eggs laid is small—up to 25, with most of them typically hatching into tadpoles.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q4675424 belalongensis Amphibians described in 2008 Frogs of Asia Amphibians of Brunei Endemic fauna of Brunei Endemic fauna of Borneo Amphibians of Borneo