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13 - Anurans of the Crato Formation
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- By Maria Eduarda C. Leal, Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Rua São Francisco Xavier 524, Rio de Janeiro, 20559–900, Brazil, David M. Martill, Reader in Palaeobiology in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Portsmouth, Paulo M. Brito, Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Rua São Francisco Xavier 524, Rio de Janeiro, 20559–900, Brazil.
- David M. Martill, University of Portsmouth, Günter Bechly, Robert F. Loveridge, University of Portsmouth
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- Book:
- The Crato Fossil Beds of Brazil
- Published online:
- 22 August 2009
- Print publication:
- 13 December 2007, pp 444-451
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Introduction
The Anura – frogs and toads of common parlance – comprise about 5,250 extant species with a near world wide distribution, excluding only Antarctica, the highest latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere and the marine realm. Their unique morphology, physiology and behavioural adaptations allow anurans to inhabit a wide range of environments, from the arctic tundra to hot arid deserts. However, they achieve their maximum diversity in the Neotropical rainforests (Duellman and Trueb, 1994; Hofrichter, 2000), where they prefer moist environments. Most species are required to return to freshwater environments for the development of their larvae.
Their temporal range begins in the Triassic if the pro-anurans of Madagascar and Poland are considered anurans. True anurans are relatively scarce in the Mesozoic, only becoming common and diverse in the Cenozoic (Roček, 2000). The earliest occurrence of a true anuran is Prosalirus bitis Shubin and Jenkins, 1995, from the Lower Jurassic of Arizona. This taxon achieved the basic anuran body plan that has persisted without significant modification for approximately 200 myr. Of the present 33 anuran families, five have a fossil record extending to the Mesozoic (Leiopelmatidae, Discoglossidae, Pipidae, Pelobatidae and Leptodactylidae), and one family, † Palaeobatrachidae, is exclusively Mesozoic. All but the † Palaeobatrachidae occur in Gondwana (Roček, 2000; Gao and Chen, 2004).
Anurans were first reported in the Crato Formation by Kellner and Campos (1986), where they occur only in the Nova Olinda Member (see Maisey, 1991: 325 for figure).