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Description

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The Northern Sandhill Frog is a smallish frog with body mass between 2 to 8 grams. Mature males achieve a snout-vent length of 26 to 30 millimeters, with adult females reaching 28 to 33 millimeters. Arenophryne rotunda has a distinct form based upon its forward burrowing habit. This frog has a diagnostic broad head and rotund body form, featuring a protective pad at its nose tip characteristic of forward burrowers. The front legs are powerful, built for forward digging. The legs are short, as well as the fingers and toes. Its broadly sculpted fingers are arrayed on spade-like hands, adapted for its forward burrowing habit (Tyler 1998).Skin coloration may vary from off-white to cream to light green, overlain with irregular blotches of brown or brick-red speckles (Government of Western Australia 2010).PhylogenyA closely related species, the Southern Sandhill frog, Arenophryne xiphorhyncha, was earlier thought to be identical to A. rotunda; however, more detailed analysis reveals this closely related species residing in the Kalbarri dunes, is a distinct taxon. These two taxa apparently genetically diverged approximately five to seven million years before present. Species AssociatesThere are a number of faunal associates in this coastal zone of the Southwest Australian savanna (Hogan and World Wildlife Fund 2012). Notable avifauna include the Near Threatened blue-billed duck (Oxyura australis), the Vulnerable fairy tern (Sterna nereis), and the Vulnerable fat eastern curlew (Numenius madagascariensis). Notable reptile associates include a swimming skink, the Vulnerable Shark Bay ctenotus (Ctenotus zastictus), which is also found on the dunes of Shark Bay; and the Christina's lerista (Lerista christinae), a species also endemic to the coastal zone of the Southwestern Australian savanna; and the Endangered woma (Aspidites ramsayi).Notable mammals with overlap or near overlap of range include the Near Threatened black-footed rock wallaby (Petrogale lateralis), although the limits of this wallaby's distribution have shrunk due to its recent population decline.

References

  • Cartledge, V.A., Withers P.C., Thompson G.G., and McMaster K.A. (2006). ''Water Relations of the Burrowing Sandhill Frog, Arenophryne rotunda.'' Journal of Comparative Physiology B: Biochemical, Systemic, and Environmental Physiology, 176(4), 295-302.
  • Hero, J. & Roberts, D. 2004. Arenophryne rotunda. In: IUCN 2012. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2012.2. www.iucnredlist.org. Downloaded on October 2012.
  • Hogan, C.M. & World Wildlife Fund. 2012. Southwest Australia savanna. Ed. Peter Saundry. Encyclopedia of Earth. National Council for Science and the Environment, Washington DC, USA
  • Roberts, J.D. (1984). ''Terrestrial egg and deposition and direct development in Arenophryne rotunda, a myobatrachid frog from the coastal sand dunes at Shark Bay, Western Australia.'' Australian Wildlife Research, 11, 191-200.
  • Tyler, M. J. (1998). Australian Frogs: A Natural History. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York.

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Distribution and Habitat

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Geographic Range:This frog is endemic to a limited a strip of land along the coastal zone in southwest Australia within the Southwest Australian savanna ecoregion, including the arid zones from Shark Bay (Edel Land) southward to the Murchison River of Western Australia (Hero and Roberts 2004). A. rotunda also occurs on Dirk Hartog Island. The estimated altitudinal range of the species is from sea level to 150 meters above mean sea level. Population densities have been estimated as great as 277 individuals per hectare (Tyler 1998).A. rotunda chiefly occurs in limited extents of the coastal dunes of the Southwest Australia savanna. Principal habitats are comprised of course-grained sand. This fossorial species requires no standing water in any form for its survival or breeding; however, residual soil moisture retained in dunes soil is critical for the survival of this anuran, particularly due to the arid climate and its sparse mercurial precipitation. Biomass density of this species has been estimated at 530 grams per hectare (Tyler 1998).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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A. rotunda burrows in the softer moist sand and shelters down to ten centimeters beneath the ground surface (Hero and Roberts 2004). Burrowing occurs with the onset of day, and the frog emerges at night from its burrow (Tyler 1998). This frog is mostly active in the austral winter, as it emerges from its burrow to find food. A. rotunda is one of only two forward burrowing Australian frogs. This frog may also seek temporary shelter from daytime heat under refuges of natural or anthropogenic objects such as logs or corrugated steel fragments (Tyler 1998).For several Australian desert frog species, an adaptation to aridity is via the formation of a cocoon layer, where cytomorphosis occurs at the outer layer of the skin. This outer layer may be shed all at once as new deeper skin cells push outward (Tyler 1998). A. rotunda achieves hydration by burrowing into a soil layer with sufficient moisture content to maintain hydration balance during its diurnal burrowing; in fact, contact with soil moisture of as low as 1.5 percent is sufficient to achieve such hydration balance by skin osmosis (Cartledge et al. 1996).A. rotunda feeds primarily on ants and other insects, and may travel about thirty meters on land in search of food; locomotion is by way of crawling rather than hopping (Government of Western Australia 2010).In the austral spring, A. rotunda males begin to produce mating vocalizations. Anuran pairs of this species summer together (December to March) underground and then eggs are deposited in austral autumn (usually around the month of April) (Roberts 1984). A clutch of sizable creamy white eggs up to five millimeters in diameter are deposited in deep burrows up to 80 centimeters beneath the ground surface in moist sand. Minute frogs hatch from the eggs after approximately nine weeks, so that there is no tadpole phase (Tyler et al. 1994).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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Although the IUCN does not consider A. rotunda to be threatened, this species was the first frog in Australia to be classified as worthy of protection under federal legislation in 1978. Tyler has estimated the present viable range of A. rotunda at a mere 5300 square kilometers (1998). A. rotunda is considered locally abundant in this narrow range; moreover, the total species population could be on the order of 100,000,000 individuals, provided the limited field data can be extrapolated to the total range. Caution indicates that one should not be overly confident of this species security, since the limited range alone places A. rotunda in a position of risk, in the event of prolonged drought years, where upper soils could be subject to dessication.While there are no specific known threats to this species, there are instances of coastal overgrazing near the protected area that promote concern. There is also the theoretical concern that future coastal development pressures, including tourism itself, could reduce the effective fragile dune habitat of this frog. The greatest threat, however, is the possibility of a prolonged drought which could greatly reduce the protective soil moisture burrowing habitat of A. rotunda and cause a catastrophic population decline, given the very limited species range.Conservation MeasuresProtected in Shark Bay due to World Heritage Listing and also protected in Kalbarri National Park.
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Sandhill frog

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The northern sandhill frog (Arenophryne rotunda) is a small, fossorial frog native to a small region of the Western Australian coast. It was formerly considered the sole species within the genus Arenophryne until the first decade of the 2000s, when a new species of frog called the southern sandhill frog was discovered about 100 kilometres from Geraldton, Western Australia in Kalbarri National Park and given the scientific name Arenophryne xiphorhyncha.

Description

The northern sandhill frog is a small, rotund frog, reaching a maximum length of 33 millimetres (1.3 in). It is a burrowing frog, and has short, strong legs. The dorsal surface is mottled in colour, from dark grey and white to pale brown. It is covered in small warts and ridges. It also has small, bright red or green, patches on its back. The ventral surface is a dull white. The head is small, and triangular in shape, and the body is flat. The tympanum is not visible

Ecology and behaviour

The sandhill frogs are one of the more peculiar of the Australian ground frogs, family Myobatrachidae. Most of the Australian burrowing frogs burrow backwards; only the sandhill frog and the turtle frog (Myobatrachus gouldii) burrow head first. To achieve this, both frogs have small heads and strong arms. The sandhill frog inhabits coarse-grained sand dunes on the coast of Western Australia, ranging from Shark Bay in the north, Kalbarri National Park in the south and Cooloomia in the east. They inhabit an area which does not have much free-standing water, as it is quickly absorbed into the sand. However, the sand becomes moist at a relatively shallow depth. During the day, the sandhill frog will avoid desiccation by burrowing into the moist layer of the sand, emerging at night to hunt. (Hogan et al. 2012) Their diet primarily consists of ants.

During March and April, the males will call from above or below the surface of the sand. The male and female will burrow together. As the dry season dries out the sand, the frogs will continue to dig further to remain in the wet layer. They may reach depths of 80 centimetres (2.6 ft). They will lay a maximum of eleven eggs underground, where they undergo direct development, and bypass the tadpole stage. The adult frogs will remain underground for at least five months.

References

  1. ^ Jean-Marc Hero, Dale Roberts (2004). "Arenophryne rotunda". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004: e.T41129A10403608. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T41129A10403608.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
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Sandhill frog: Brief Summary

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The northern sandhill frog (Arenophryne rotunda) is a small, fossorial frog native to a small region of the Western Australian coast. It was formerly considered the sole species within the genus Arenophryne until the first decade of the 2000s, when a new species of frog called the southern sandhill frog was discovered about 100 kilometres from Geraldton, Western Australia in Kalbarri National Park and given the scientific name Arenophryne xiphorhyncha.

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