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Evolution of the African slippery frogs (Anura: Conraua ), including the world’s largest living frog
Author(s) -
Blackburn David C.,
Nielsen Stuart V.,
Barej Michael F.,
Doumbia Joseph,
Hirschfeld Mareike,
Kouamé N’Goran G.,
Lawson Dwight,
Loader Simon,
OforiBoateng Caleb,
Stanley Edward L.,
Rödel MarkOliver
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
zoologica scripta
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.204
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1463-6409
pISSN - 0300-3256
DOI - 10.1111/zsc.12447
Subject(s) - biology , biogeography , clade , phylogenetic tree , ecology , zoology , taxon , genus , evolutionary biology , biochemistry , gene
Although Conraua goliath is well known as the largest living frog species, the diversity and evolution of the genus Conraua across sub‐Saharan Africa remain poorly understood. We present multilocus phylogenetic analyses of the six currently recognized species that provide insights into divergence times, biogeography, body size evolution and undescribed species. An analysis of divergence times demonstrates that crown‐group Conraua arose some time during the latest Oligocene to mid‐Miocene followed by divergence into major lineages in the mid‐Miocene that may reflect the fragmentation of widespread tropical forests in Africa that began at this time. We find three pairs of sister species, C. crassipes + C. beccarii , C. alleni + C. derooi and C. goliath + C. robusta , each of which diverged during the Miocene. These relationships reject phylogenetic hypotheses based solely on biogeography as the geographically peripheral C. beccarii from north‐eastern Africa is nested within western African species and the Central African species do not form a clade. Our species delimitation analyses provide support for undescribed species in C. alleni , C. beccarii and C. derooi , and possibly C. crassipes , suggesting that the current taxonomy substantially underestimates species diversity. There is no clear directional trend of either increasing or decreasing body size in Conraua and the three largest species do not form a clade. With a robust phylogenetic hypothesis in hand, further field‐based studies are needed to understand the evolution of morphology and life history in this charismatic African anuran clade.