457 research outputs found
Extreme tadpoles: the morphology of the fossorial megophryid larva, Leptobrachella mjobergi
The bizarre larvae of
Leptobrachella mjobergi
are fossorial and live in the gravel beds of small streams. These
tadpoles are vermiform in body shape. Here we present details on their skeleton and musculature, particularly of the
head. The entire cranium and its associated musculature are reconstructed in three dimensions from serial histological
sections. The hyobranchial apparatus is highly reduced. The head of the
L. mjobergi
larva is more mobile than in other
anuran species. This mobility can largely be ascribed to the exclusion of the notochord from the cranial base and an
articulation of the foramen magnum floor with the atlas of the tadpole. The articulation is unique among anuran
species, but design parallels can be drawn to salamanders and the articulation between atlas and axis in mammals. In
L. mjobergi
, the atlas forms an anterior dens that articulates with the basal plate in an accessory, third occipital
articular face. The muscle arrangements deviate from the patterns found in other tadpoles: For instance, epaxial and
ventral trunk muscles reach far forward onto the skull. The post-cranial skeleton of
L. mjobergi
is considerably longer
than that of other anurans: it comprises a total of 35 vertebrae, including more than 20 post-sacral perichordal centra.
Despite a number of features in cranial and axial morphology of
L. mjobergi
, which appear to be adaptations to its
fossorial mode of life, the species clearly shares other features with its megophryid and pelobatid relatives.
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2005 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserve
Dressed in black. A New Ansonia Stoliczka, 1870 (Lissamphibia: Anura: Bufonidae) from Gunung Murud, Sarawak, East Malaysia (Borneo)
Diversification in a biodiversity hotspot–The evolution of Southeast Asian rhacophorid tree frogs on Borneo (Amphibia: Anura: Rhacophoridae)
The tree-frog family Rhacophoridae is a major group contributing to the high pecies richness and reproductive
diversity among vertebrates of Sundaland. Nonetheless, rhacophorid evolution, specially on Borneo,
has not been studied within a phylogenetic context. In this study, we examine the phylogenetic
relationships of 38 (out of 41) Bornean species of Rhacophoridae, in combination with data from previous
phylogenetic studies. In the final super matrix of 91 species, we analyse sequence data from two mitochondrial
and three nuclear genes. The resulting trees show the genus Rhacophorus as a paraphyletic
assemblage. As a consequence, we transfer Rhacophorus appendiculatus and R. kajau to two other genera
and propose the new phylogeny-based combinations- Kurixalus appendiculatus and Feihyla kajau, respectively.
Furthermore, we use our phylogenetic hypotheses to reconstruct the evolution of reproductive
modes in rhacophorid tree frogs. Direct development to the exclusion of a free larval stage evolved twice
independently, once in an ancestor of the Pseudophilautus + Raorchestes clade in India and Sri Lanka, and
once within Philautus in Southeast Asia. The deposition of egg clutches covered by a layer of jelly in Feihyla
is also present in F. kajau and thus confirms our generic reassignment. The remarkably high diversity
of rhacophorid tree frogs on Borneo is the outcome of a complex pattern of repeated vicariance and dispersal
events caused by past changes in the climatic and geological history of the Sunda shelf. We identified
geographic clades of closely related endemic species within Rhacophorus and Philautus, which result
from local island radiations on Borne
Larval morphologies of three species of stream toads, genus Ansonia (Amphibia: Bufonidae) from East Malaysia (Borneo), with a key to known Bornean Ansonia tadpoles
We describe the external morphology of tadpoles of Ansonia longidigita Inger, 1960, A. minuta Inger, 1960, and A.
platysoma Inger, 1960 from East Malaysia, Borneo. Specimens were collected from small to medium-sized streams with
swift current in Sarawak State. Tadpole identities were confirmed by matching tadpole genetic sequences (16S mtRNA)
to sequences from adult toads from the same collection sites. Among the three species, A. minuta appears to prefer the
strongest current and was collected from fast-flowing waters in association with boulders. Ansonia longidigita larvae
inhabit more moderate currents than sympatric A. platysoma. Species microhabitat choices are reflected in their body
shape, with A. minuta and A. platysoma being more streamlined than A. longidigita. Colour photos of live specimens and
a key to the known Bornean Ansonia tadpoles are provided to facilitate field identification
Larval morphologies of three species of stream toads, genus Ansonia (Amphibia: Bufonidae) from East Malaysia (Borneo), with a key to known Bornean Ansonia tadpoles
We describe the external morphology of tadpoles of Ansonia longidigita Inger, 1960, A. minuta Inger, 1960, and A.
platysoma Inger, 1960 from East Malaysia, Borneo. Specimens were collected from small to medium-sized streams with
swift current in Sarawak State. Tadpole identities were confirmed by matching tadpole genetic sequences (16S mtRNA)
to sequences from adult toads from the same collection sites. Among the three species, A. minuta appears to prefer the
strongest current and was collected from fast-flowing waters in association with boulders. Ansonia longidigita larvae
inhabit more moderate currents than sympatric A. platysoma. Species microhabitat choices are reflected in their body
shape, with A. minuta and A. platysoma being more streamlined than A. longidigita. Colour photos of live specimens and
a key to the known Bornean Ansonia tadpoles are provided to facilitate field identification
The role of information search and its influence on risk preferences
According to the ‘Description–Experience gap’ (DE gap), when people are provided with the descriptions of risky prospects they make choices as if they overweight the probability of rare events; but when making decisions from experience after exploring the prospects’ properties, they behave as if they underweight such probability. This study revisits this discrepancy while focusing on information-search in decisions from experience. We report findings from a lab-experiment with three treatments: a standard version of decisions from description and two versions of decisions from experience: with and without a ‘history table’ recording previously sampled events. We find that people sample more from lotteries with rarer events. The history table proved influential; in its absence search is more responsive to cues such as a lottery’s variance while in its presence the cue that stands out is the table’s maximum capacity. Our analysis of risky choices captures a significant DE gap which is mitigated by the presence of the history table. We elicit probability weighting functions at the individual level and report that subjects overweight rare events in experience but less so than in description. Finally, we report a measure that allows us to compare the type of DE gap found in studies using choice patterns with that inferred through valuation and find that the phenomenon is similar but not identical across the two methods
Red Hot Chili Pepper. A New Calluella Stoliczka, 1872 (Lissamphibia: Anura: Microhylidae) from Sarawak, East Malaysia (Borneo)
A new brightly-coloured (olive and red) species of microhylid frog of the genus Calluella Stoliczka 1872 is described from the upper elevations of Gunung Penrissen and the Matang Range, Sarawak, East Malaysia (Borneo). Calluella capsa, new species, is diagnosable in showing the following combination of characters: SVL up to 36.0 mm; dorsum weakly granular; a faint dermal fold across forehead; toe tips obtuse; webbing on toes basal; lateral fringes on toes present; outer metatarsal tubercle present; and dorsum greyish-olive, with red spots; half of venter bright red, the rest with large white and dark areas. The new species is the eighth species of Calluella to be described, and the fourth known from Borneo. A preliminary phylogeny of Calluella and its relatives is presented, and the new taxon compared with congeners from Malaysia and other parts of south-east Asia
Phylogenetic relationships of the Rhacophorus everetti group and implications for the evolution of reproductive modes in Philautus (Amphibia: Anura: Rhacophoridae)
How to detect high-performing individuals and groups: Decision similarity predicts accuracy
Distinguishing between high- and low-performing individuals and groups is of prime importance in a wide range of high-stakes contexts. While this is straightforward when accurate records of past performance exist, these records are unavailable in most real-world contexts. Focusing on the class of binary decision problems, we use a combined theoretical and empirical approach to develop and test a approach to this important problem. First, we use a general mathematical argument and numerical simulations to show that the similarity of an individual's decisions to others is a powerful predictor of that individual's decision accuracy. Second, testing this prediction with several large datasets on breast and skin cancer diagnostics, geopolitical forecasting, and a general knowledge task, we find that decision similarity robustly permits the identification of high-performing individuals and groups. Our findings offer a simple, yet broadly applicable, heuristic for improving real-world decision-making systems
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