INVESTIGADORES
SCHAEFER Eduardo Federico
artículos
Título:
Scinax nasicus (Lesser Snouted Treefrog) and Scinax acuminatus (Mato Grosso Snouted Treefrog). Refugia.
Autor/es:
DURÉ, M. I., E. F. SCHAEFER
Revista:
HERPETOLOGICAL REVIEW
Editorial:
SSAR - Allen Press
Referencias:
Lugar: Salt Lake City. Utah; Año: 2011 vol. 42 p. 415 - 416
ISSN:
0018-084X
Resumen:
Scinax nasicus occurs in Paraguay, northern and central Argentina (south to Córdoba and Buenos Aires provinces), Uruguay, eastern Bolivia, and southern Brazil. Scinax acuminatus occurs in southern Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul (Brazil), Paraguay, Bolivia (Santa Cruz), and northern Argentina (Frost 2011. Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 5.5, 31 Jan 2011. Electronic database accessible at http://research.amnh.org/vz/herpetology/ amphibia/, American Museum of Natural History, New York). From Sept?Dec 2009, we conducted surveys ca. 10 km NE Corrientes City, Argentina (27.4321°S, 58.7466°W). The study site is part of the Chacoan Domain, Oriental Chaco District (Cabrera and Willink 1980. Biogeografía de América Latina. Secretaría Federal OEA. Monografía 13:1?122; Carnevali 1994. Fitogeografía de la Provincia de Corrientes. Gobierno de la provincia de Corrientes e INTA, 324 pp.), and is characterized by the presence of numerous temporary, semi-permanent, and permanent wáter bodies. Mean annual precipitation is 1500 mm and mean anual temperature is 23°C. According to Carnevali (1994, op. cit.), the original plant formation at this site was Schinopsis balansae ?quebracho? forest, which is currently extremely degraded and largely replaced by sclerophyllous forest with a prevalence of Prosopis affinis, P. nigra, Acacia caven, Celtis sp., and numerous colonies of Aechmea distichantha and Bromelia sp. Numerous amphibian species are associated with bromeliads, using them strictly as shelter or for entire life cycle, reproducing and feeding inside the plant axil (Peixoto 1995. Rev. Univ. Rural, Sér. Ciênc. da Vida 17[2]:75?83). In the study area, the bromeliad Aechmea distichantha mainly is used as a refuge for various species of amphibians and reptiles. This species has a high structural complexity and the capacity to store water for long periods (phytotelmata), such that individual plants harbor a diversity of arthropods and thus provide shelter and food for amphibians. In the study period we found Scinax nasicus (N = 60) and S. acuminatus (N = 5) using A. distichantha as refugia (Figs. 1A, B).