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Probreviceps loveridgei Parker, 1931
Probreviceps macrodactylus loveridgei Parker, 1931, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., Ser. 10, 8: 263. Holotype: BMNH 1928.5.1.8 (now reregistered as 1947.2.12.56 according to museum records), by original designation. Type locality: "Baglio, Uluguru Mts., Tanganyika Territory", Tanzania.
Probreviceps loveridgei — Mkonyi, Negalason, Msuya, Howell, and Channing, 2004, Herpetol. Rev., 35: 261.
Common Names
Loveridge's Forest Frog (Channing and Howell, 2006, Amph. E. Afr.: 231).
Distribution
Forest and forest remnants at mid-altitudes on the Uluguru Mountains, Tanzania.
Geographic Occurrence
Natural Resident: Tanzania
Endemic: Tanzania
Comment
Loader, Gower, Howell, Doggart, Rödel, de Sá, Cohen, and Wilkinson, 2004, Organisms Divers. Evol., 4: 232, suggested that Probreviceps macrodactylus loveridgei is more closely related to Probreviceps uluguruensis than to Probreviceps macrodactylus rungwensis and on this basis and morphological distinctiveness suggested that the latter may be a distinct species, Probreviceps rungwensis, but declined to make the formal change. Mkonyi, Negalason, Msuya, Howell, and Channing, 2004, Herpetol. Rev., 35: 261-262, recognized Probreviceps loveridgei as distinct. Channing and Howell, 2006, Amph. E. Afr.: 231-232, provided an account. Harper, Measey, Patrick, Menegon, and Vonesh, 2010, Field Guide Amph. E. Arc Mts. Tanzania and Kenya: 92–93, provided a brief account. Channing and Rödel, 2019, Field Guide Frogs & Other Amph. Afr.: 124–125, provided a brief account, photograph, and range map. Channing and Rödel, 2019, Field Guide Frogs & Other Amph. Afr.: 124–125, provided a brief account, photograph, and range map. Mkonyi, 2019, J. Nat. Hist., London, 53: 2711–2722, reported on advertisment call.
External links:
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- For access to general information see Wikipedia
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- To search the NIH genetic sequence database, see GenBank
- For additional information see AmphibiaWeb report
- For information on conservation status and distribution see the IUCN Redlist
- For information on distribution, habitat, and conservation see the Map of Life
- For related information on conservation and images as well as observations see iNaturalist
- For access to available specimen data for this species, from over 350 scientific collections, go to Vertnet.