dcsimg

Description

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Males 24.2-25.4 mm SVL. Stout body. Head dorsally convex, with convex interorbital area. Snout rounded in profile and angled at 99 degrees (category 5 of Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda 2005), with sharp canthal edges, flat loreal region, and a flat internarial space. Tympanum oval, oblique, and vertical, with an indistinct outer rim and a prominent supratympanic fold. Pineal ocellus lacking. Vomerine teeth not present. Lingual papilla absent. Fingers have lateral dermal fringe. Toes webbed medially. Tarsal fold and calcar are absent. Head and dorsum shagreened with glandular warts. Median dermal ridge running from snout to vent. Flanks granular. Dorsal surfaces of forelimb, thigh, shank, and foot bear glandular warts. Throat, chest, belly, and underside of thigh are granular. Males have internal vocal slits and nuptial pad on dorsal and inner sides of prepollex and finger I (Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda 2005). Color in preservative: Light brown body with dark brown blotches and about 5 white spots on dorsum. Loreal region pale brown with small dark brown spots. Tympanic area dark brown with white patch. Upper lip pale brown. Upper flank dark brown, lower flank yellow. Limbs have 3-4 crossbars on a pale brown background; posterior thigh is dark brown. Ventrum is pale yellow (Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda 2005).The species epithet zal is a Polish word meaning deep, unbearable sadness and regret, "like a howling inside you, so unbearable that it breaks your heart" (from the pianist Artur Rubinstein, cited in Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda 2005). Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda (2005) comment that "zal expresses completely our sadness and frustration at the loss of this and so many other endemic amphibians in Sri Lanka."
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Distribution and Habitat

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Endemic to Sri Lanka and known only from the general type locality "Ceylon". The habitat requirements of this species are not known (Stuart et al. 2008).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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This species has been found only at the type locality and is known only from the holotype and two paratypes, described by Manamendra-Arachchi and Pethiyagoda (2005). It has not been collected or recorded since before 1947; despite extensive searches Pseudophilautus zal has not been rediscovered and is presumed extinct. It is believed to have been a direct developer, as is the case for other members of the genus Pseudophilautus (Stuart et al. 2008).
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Life History, Abundance, Activity, and Special Behaviors

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The exact reasons for extinction are not known, but habitat loss is thought to have been the major factor in this species' decline (Stuart et al. 2008).
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Krystal Gong
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AmphibiaWeb articles