Vampyrius

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Vampire tree frog
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Rhacophoridae
Subfamily: Rhacophorinae
Genus: Vampyrius
Dubois, Ohler, and Pyron, 2021
Species:
V. vampyrus
Binomial name
Vampyrius vampyrus
(Rowley, Le, Tran, Stuart, and Hoang, 2010)
Synonyms

Rhacophorus vampyrus Rowley, Le, Tran, Stuart, and Hoang, 2010

Southern Vietnam Map
Map
Map of Vietnam, with rectangles showing approximate range of R. Vampyrus.

Rhacophorus vampyrus (Vampyrius vampyrus) is a flying frog. It lives in Vietnam. It is the only frog species in its genus.[2][3][4] People also call it the vampire tree frog[3] or vampire flying frog.[5][6][7] This is because the tadpoles have two black hooks in their mouths that look like vampire teeth.[7] Its Vietnamese name is Ếch cây ma cà rồng.[3]

This frog lives in evergreen forests on mountains at 1470–2004 meters above sea level.[3] It lives in trees. It can use the webbed skin on its feet to glide between trees.[8][9] This is why it is called a flying frog.

Scientists call this frog both Rhacophorus vampyrus and Vampyrius vampyrus in the articles they write.

Taxonomy[change | change source]

The first specimen was discovered in 2008 by Jodi Rowley of the Australian Museum at Sydney, Australia, and her student Le Thi Thuy Duong from Ho Chi Minh City University of Science. They found more in 2009 and 2010, and their team wrote the first paper about the species in the journal Zootaxa in 2010. They called it Rhacophorus vampyrus.[8][9] In 2012, scientists said this species should be called Rhacophorus calcaneus because of the shapes of the adult frogs' bodies;[10] however, in 2014 the species was reclassified as R. vampyrus through phylogenic research.[10] In 2021, a phylogenetic study found the species to fall far outside Rhacophorus, and instead be the sister genus to Gracixalus, so scientists gave it its own genus, Vampyrius.[11][12][13]

Appearance[change | change source]

R. vampyrus can grow to 4.5 cm.[6] There is webbed skin between the toes, so it can glide between trees.[9][10] The skin of the frog's back is copper-brown in color with fainter, dark-brown mottling. The chest and belly are white, with a some black marks at the edge of the chest. The upper surfaces of the arms and legs are copper brown with some dark brown marks. The upper surfaces of the front and back feet are copper brown in color which fades to pinkish-cream or grey at the toes. The lower surfaces of the front and back feet are a pale grey color. The upper surface of webbing of the hands and feet is dark grey to black in color. The lower surfaces of the species are grey. R. vampyrus has pale yellow/gold irises with a small rim of blue.[3] There is also a pointed piece sticking out at tibiotarsal articulation.[3] Tadpoles have black hooks on their mouths made of keratin, which is the same thing fingernails are made of.[14] The tadpoles have long bodies and long tails. They are dark brown in color, but sometimes the tail fins have no color.[15] The tadpoles' eyes are black. The iris of the eye has gold specks.[15]

Home[change | change source]

So far, people have only found R. vampyrus in southern Vietnam.[1] The first specimens were found in Bidoup Núi Bà National Park, but scientists think they may also live in many parts of the Langbian Plateau (specifically in Chư Yang Sin National Park and Phước Bình National Park).[3] Later, scientists found them in Ta Dung Nature reserve, Dak Glong District.[16] The area that R. vampyrus extends is approximately 2,082 km2.[2] The two places where R. vampyrus lives are far apart. The space in between has low elevation, which would make it hard for the frog to live there or travel.[2] Scientists think it used to live in more places, but human beings changed the places where it lives.[2][2]

Life cycle[change | change source]

R. vampyrus lays its eggs in small, water-filled holes in trees during the rainy seasons, generally 0.3–1.2 m above the ground. It lays eggs mostly from July to May, producing clutches of 250 eggs or fewer.[2] The eggs are laid in foam nests on the wall of the tree hole, where nests are usually about 30–120 cm above the ground. The larvae fall into a hollow basin filled with water.[2] Tadpoles develop from the colorless eggs, but fertilized and unfertilized eggs are the same size.[15] The eggs are white in color, with a thin transparent covering on the outside shell of each egg, with diameters between 0.70 and 1.29 mm.[15] The tadpoles are long and dark-brown in color. Their tails are about three times as long as their bodies. Younger tadpoles are pale white or gray in color and they become darker over time.[15] The tadpoles have dark hooks on their lower jaws that look like fanged teeth. This is the only frog or toad that has fangs like these. There is also a hard arch on the upper jaw. The two hooks go forward.[3] The species is named after these "fangs."[7]

Example of Rhacophorus Frog Eggs

Food[change | change source]

The hooks on the tadpoles' mouths show that they eat eggs and only eggs. The mother frog lays extra unfertilized eggs (to feed them). This is an example of advanced parental care.[16][15] The tadpoles can open their mouths very wide, so they can eat large things, for examples eggs with a jelly coating still on.[16] The tadpoles' intestine pouches can also stretch very wide to hold many eggs. It shrinks when the tadpole does not eat.[16]

Conservation[change | change source]

Threats[change | change source]

In 2014, the IUCN Red List named Rhacophorus vampyrus endangered.[2] R. vampyrus has two main populations and they live far away from each other because the land in between is not a good habitat for this frog.[2] Scientists think the frogs in the two groups cannot mate with each other unless human beings take frogs from place to place, but no one has tried this yet.[17] R. vampyrus needs to live in moist and dense mountain rainforests.[16] Threats such as cutting down forests, road building, farming, and water farming can changes the area.[18] There are fewer of these frogs than there were.[2][16][19] including R. vampyrus.

Deforestation in Vietnam

Efforts[change | change source]

The two places where scientists found this frog are already protected: Bidoup-Nui National Park and Ta Dung Nature Reserve.[2] R. vampyrus may live in other areas, for example Chu Yang Sin National Park and Phuoc Binh National Park.[3] Scientists do not know as much as they want to know about this frog,[2] which may make it harder to protect it.[2]

References[change | change source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2020). "Rhacophorus vampyrus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T47143971A177130806. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T47143971A177130806.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 "Rhacophorus vampyrus: IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 20 January 2014. doi:10.2305/iucn.uk.2020-3.rlts.t47143971a177130806.en. Retrieved 30 September 2022.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Jodi J. L. Rowley; Le Thi Thuy Duong; Tran Thi Anh Dao; Bryan L. Stuart & Hoang Duc Huy (2010). "A new tree frog of the genus Rhacophorus (Anura: Rhacophoridae) from southern Vietnam" (PDF). Zootaxa. 2727: 45–55.
  4. "Vampyrius vampyrus (Rowley, Le, Thi, Stuart, and Hoang, 2010) | Amphibian Species of the World". amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  5. "Vampire flying frog found in Vietnam". ABC News. 6 January 2011. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Ben Cubby (7 January 2011). "Frog's scary name is worse than its bite". The Age. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Charles Choi (7 January 2011). ""Vampire Flying Frog" Found; Tadpoles Have Black Fangs". National Geographic. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Stephen Luntz (March 2011). "Flying Vampire Frog Alert". Australasian Science. Control Publications. Archived from the original on 5 September 2014. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Aaron Smith (13 January 2011). "Vampire flying frog discovered". Australian Geographic. Archived from the original on 14 December 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Kropachev, Ivan I.; Evsyunin, Alexey A.; Orlov, Nikolai L.; Nguyen, Tao Thien (22 March 2022). "A New Species of <i>Rhacophorus</i> Genus (Anura: Rhacophoridae: Rhacophorinae) from Lang Son Province, Northern Vietnam". Russian Journal of Herpetology. 29 (1): 35–46. doi:10.30906/1026-2296-2022-29-1-35-46. ISSN 1026-2296. S2CID 247612765.
  11. "Vampyrius Dubois, Ohler, and Pyron, 2021 | Amphibian Species of the World". amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  12. Dubois, Alain; Ohler, Annemarie; Pyron, R. Alexander (26 February 2021). "New concepts and methods for phylogenetic taxonomy and nomenclature in zoology, exemplified by a new ranked cladonomy of recent amphibians (Lissamphibia)". Megataxa. 5 (1): 1–738–1–738. doi:10.11646/megataxa.5.1.1. ISSN 2703-3090. S2CID 236674452.
  13. "AmphibiaWeb - Rhacophorus vampyrus". amphibiaweb.org. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  14. "AmphibiaWeb - Rhacophorus vampyrus". amphibiaweb.org. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 Anna B. Vassilieva; Eduard A. Galoyan & Nikolay A. Poyarkov Jr. (2013). "Rhacophorus vampyrus (Anura: Rhacophoridae) reproductive biology: A new type of oophagous tadpole in Asian treefrogs". Journal of Herpetology. 47 (4): 607–614. doi:10.1670/12-180. S2CID 83859555.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 Rowley, J.J.L.; Tran, D.T.A.; Le, D.T.T.; Hoang, H.D.; Altig, R. (2012). "The strangest tadpole: The oophagous, tree-hole dwelling tadpole of Rhacophorus vampyrus (Anura: Rhacophoridae) from Vietnam". Journal of Natural History. 46 (47–48): 2969–2978. doi:10.1080/00222933.2012.732622. S2CID 84414631.
  17. AArk/ASG Assessment Workshop. 2012. Conservation Needs Assessment for Rhacophorus vampyrus, Viet Nam. https://www.conservationneeds.org/Assessment/AssessmentResults?assessmentId=2405&countryId=141&speciesId=5387. Accessed 30 Sep 2022
  18. Thinh, Phung Ba; Quang, Nguyen Hao; Quyet, Le Khac; Duc, Hoang Minh (6 August 2012). "A survey on avifauna of Bidoup - Nui Ba national park, Lam Dong province". Tap Chi Sinh Hoc. 34 (3se). doi:10.15625/0866-7160/v34n3se.1765. ISSN 0866-7160.
  19. Vogelmann, James E.; Khoa, Phung Van; Lan, Do Xuan; Shermeyer, Jacob; Shi, Hua; Wimberly, Michael C.; Duong, Hoang Tat; Huong, Le Van (July 2017). "Assessment of Forest Degradation in Vietnam Using Landsat Time Series Data". Forests. 8 (7): 238. doi:10.3390/f8070238. ISSN 1999-4907.

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