Amphibian diversity in serranía de majé, an isolated mountain range in eastern panamá

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Abstract

Eastern Panamá is within the Mesoamerican biodiversity hotspot and supports an understudied amphibian fauna. Here we characterize the amphibian diversity across an elevational gradient in one of the least studied mountain ranges in eastern Panamá, Serranía de Majé. A total of 38 species were found, which represent 17% of all species reported for Panamá. Based on expected richness function and individual-based rarefaction curves, it is estimated that this is an underestimate and that at least 44 amphibian species occur in this area. Members of all three amphibian orders were encountered, represented by ten families and 22 genera, including five species endemic to Central America. Estimated species richness decreased with elevation, and the mid-elevation site supported both lowland and highland species. Our study provides a baseline for understanding the distribution pattern of amphibians in Panamá, for conservation efforts, and for determining disease-induced changes in amphibian communities.

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Medina, D., Ibáñez, R., Lips, K. R., & Crawford, A. J. (2019). Amphibian diversity in serranía de majé, an isolated mountain range in eastern panamá. ZooKeys, 2019(859), 117–130. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.859.32869

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