MyobatrachidaeAustralian Frogs

This di­verse fam­ily of more than 100 species is as­signed to 20 ex­tant gen­era, in two sub­fam­i­lies. The com­mon name for my­oba­tra­chids un­der­scores the fact that these are the dom­i­nant ter­res­trial frogs of Aus­tralia, fill­ing niches that are else­where oc­cu­pied by bu­fonids, lep­to­dactylids, mi­cro­hylids, pelo­batids, and ranids. All gen­era are found in Aus­tralia, and only a few occur any­where else. Three gen­era are also known from Papua New Guinea; four from Tas­ma­nia.

The Aus­tralian frogs are split al­most evenly into two sub­fam­i­lies, each of which have sev­eral dis­tinct char­ac­ters. Across both sub­fam­i­lies, these frogs lack ribs, have eight am­ph­icoelous pre­sacral ver­te­brae with per­sis­tent no­to­chords in ju­ve­niles, com­pletely fused as­tra­galus and cal­ca­neum, and in­guinal am­plexus. Most my­oba­tra­chids have teeth on the upper jaw (some gen­era lack teeth al­to­gether), and a car­ti­lagi­nous omoster­num and ster­num. Adult sizes of My­oba­tra­chines are typ­i­cally 20 -40 mm snout-vent length, but species in a few gen­era grow to 80 mm; Limno­dy­nas­tines are larger, rang­ing from 35 - 115 mm. Diploid num­ber is usu­ally 24, al­though some Limno­dy­nastes have 22.

The my­oba­tra­chids ex­hibit a wide range of lifestyles, but there are no treefrogs among their ranks. Many are found in arid deserts, where they spend most of their lives un­der­ground, bur­row­ing through sand with the help of a dig­ging spade on each hind foot (e.g. Heleio­porus, Neo­ba­tra­chus). Species of No­taden also bur­row, but are dis­tin­guished in hav­ing poorly os­si­fied skulls, being brightly col­ored, and se­cret­ing sticky white tox­ins. Some fos­so­r­ial species bur­row head first (My­oba­tra­chus). Other species are found in marshes (Limno­dy­nastes, Crinia), along moun­tain streams (Tau­dacty­lus), or in the streams them­selves (Rheo­ba­tra­chus). Some species have aquatic, feed­ing, type IV tad­poles. Megis­tolo­tis tad­poles are adapted for tor­rents. The fe­males of some species make foam nests for their young, in open water, bur­rows, or even on land (e.g. Kyarranus). Ter­res­trial eggs un­dergo di­rect de­vel­op­ment in Arenophryne and My­oba­tra­chus. In sev­eral species, elab­o­rate parental care has evolved. Non­feed­ing tad­poles de­velop in the in­guinal brood pouches of male Assa. Eggs and tad­poles of Rheo­ba­tra­chus de­velop in the stom­ach of the mother. Both species of these "gas­tric-brood­ing frogs" may now be ex­tinct, per­haps early vic­tims of an epi­demic dis­ease spread­ing among Aus­tralian anu­rans in the early 1980s.

My­oba­tra­chids are placed in the Neo­ba­tra­chia, but re­la­tion­ships among the fam­i­lies of these "ad­vanced" frogs is con­tro­ver­sial at best. Most au­thors iden­tify a su­per­fam­ily, al­ter­nately called Bu­fonoidea or Hy­loidea, which in­cludes all the neo­ba­tra­chi­ans that are not Ra­noids or Mi­cro­hy­loids. The group Bu­fonoidea is thus sketchy at best. Within Bu­fonoidea, my­oba­tra­chids may be re­lated to the Sooglos­si­dae, a small fam­ily re­stricted to the Sey­chelles. Some au­thors have found that no char­ac­ters unite the two my­oba­tra­chid sub­fam­i­lies and in­deed, that My­oba­tra­chi­nae ap­pears to be closely re­lated to the sooglos­sids (and per­haps ranids), whereas Limno­dy­nas­ti­nae seems more closely re­lated to the lep­to­dactylids. If this is true, My­oba­tra­chi­dae is a pa­ra­phyletic group. Other work has sug­gested that the my­oba­tra­chids are sis­ter to the rest of Bu­fonoidea. To com­pli­cate mat­ters fur­ther, the genus Rheo­ba­tra­chus has often been con­sid­ered a sep­a­rate lin­eage.

Fos­sils of ex­tant gen­era are known from the Miocene and Pleis­tocene of Aus­tralia. Ad­di­tion­ally, an ex­tinct genus, In­do­ba­tra­chus, from the Eocene, has been ten­ta­tively as­signed to the My­oba­tra­chi­dae. This place­ment raises bio­geo­graph­i­cal ques­tions, as In­do­ba­tra­chus was found in India.

Can­natella, D. 1996. My­oba­tra­chi­nae: Tree of Life. (Web­site.) http://​tolweb.​org/​tree?​group=Myobatrachinae&​contgroup=Neobatrachia

Can­natella, D. 1996. Limno­dy­nas­ti­nae: Tree of Life. (Web­site.) http://​tolweb.​org/​tree?​group=Limnodynastinae&​contgroup=Neobatrachia

Cog­ger, H. G., and R. G. Zweifel, ed­i­tors. 1998. En­cy­clo­pe­dia of Rep­tiles and Am­phib­ians, 2nd edi­tion. Aca­d­e­mic Press, San Diego.

Du­ell­man, W. E., and L. Trueb. 1986. Bi­ol­ogy of Am­phib­ians. Johns Hop­kins Uni­ver­sity Press, Bal­ti­more, MD.

Ford, L. S., and D. Can­natella. 1993. The major clades of frogs. Her­peto­log­i­cal Mono­graphs 7:94-117.

Pough, F. H., R. M. An­drews, J. E. Cadle, M. L. Crump, A. H. Sav­itzky, and K. D. Wells. 1998. Her­petol­ogy. Pren­tice-Hall, Inc., Upper Sad­dle River, NJ.

Steb­bins, R. C., and N. W. Cohen. 1995. A nat­ural his­tory of am­phib­ians. Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity Press, Prince­ton.

Zug, G. R. 1993. Her­petol­ogy: an in­tro­duc­tory bi­ol­ogy of am­phib­ians and rep­tiles. Aca­d­e­mic Press, San Diego.

Con­trib­u­tors

Heather Hey­ing (au­thor).

Glossary

bilateral symmetry

having body symmetry such that the animal can be divided in one plane into two mirror-image halves. Animals with bilateral symmetry have dorsal and ventral sides, as well as anterior and posterior ends. Synapomorphy of the Bilateria.

ectothermic

animals which must use heat acquired from the environment and behavioral adaptations to regulate body temperature

metamorphosis

A large change in the shape or structure of an animal that happens as the animal grows. In insects, "incomplete metamorphosis" is when young animals are similar to adults and change gradually into the adult form, and "complete metamorphosis" is when there is a profound change between larval and adult forms. Butterflies have complete metamorphosis, grasshoppers have incomplete metamorphosis.

motile

having the capacity to move from one place to another.