Pristimantis illotus (Lynch and Duellman, 1997)

Class: Amphibia > Order: Anura > Superfamily: Brachycephaloidea > Family: Craugastoridae > Subfamily: Pristimantinae > Genus: Pristimantis > Species: Pristimantis illotus

Eleutherodactylus (Eleutherodactylus) illotus Lynch and Duellman, 1997, Univ. Kansas Mus. Nat. Hist. Spec. Publ., 23: 104. Holotype: KU 165881, by original designation. Type locality: "3.5 km NE (by road) Mindo, 1540 m (00° 02′ 53″ S, 78° 46′ 20″ W), Provincia Pichincha, Ecuador".

Pristimantis illotusHeinicke, Duellman, and Hedges, 2007, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Suppl. Inform., 104: Table 2.

Pristimantis (Pristimantis) illotusHedges, Duellman, and Heinicke, 2008, Zootaxa, 1737: 120.

Common Names

Dirty Rainfrog (Arteaga-Navarro, Bustamante, and Guayasamin, 2013, Amph. Rept. Mindo: 71; Coloma and Duellman, 2025, Amph. Ecuador. Vol. 3: xxxiv).

Cutín Sucio (Spanish: Coloma and Duellman, 2025, Amph. Ecuador. Vol. 3: xxxiv).

Distribution

Cloud forest (189 to 2560 m elevation) on the Pacific slopes of the Andes from the Department of Valle de Cauca in Colombia southward to northwestern Ecuador (Imbabura, Pichincha, and Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas provinces).

Geographic Occurrence

Natural Resident: Colombia, Ecuador

Comment

In the Eleutherodactylus (Eleutherodactylus) conspicillatus series, Eleutherodactylus conspicillatus group according to the original publication. In the Pristimantis (Pristimantis) conspicillatus species group of Hedges, Duellman, and Heinicke, 2008, Zootaxa, 1737: 120. Not assignable to a species group according to Padial, Grant, and Frost, 2014, Zootaxa, 3825: 127. See statement of geographic range, habitat, and conservation status (as Eleutherodactylus illotus) in Stuart, Hoffmann, Chanson, Cox, Berridge, Ramani, and Young, 2008, Threatened Amph. World: 620. Arteaga-Navarro, Bustamante, and Guayasamin, 2013, Amph. Rept. Mindo: 71–73, provided an account and dot map for Ecuador. Coloma and Duellman, 2025, Amph. Ecuador. Vol. 3: 187–189, provided an account with photographs which summarized morphological identification, systematics, natural history, distribution (including a dot map for Ecuador), and conservation.

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