2023-07-10 06:31:36
Introduction
Smilisca baudinii Classification Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Sous-embr. Vertebrata Class Amphibia Subclass Lissamphibia Superorder Salientia Order Anura Suborder Neobatrachia Family Hylidae Subfamily Hylinae Genus Smilisca Binomial name (In taxonomy (botany, zoology, etc.), the binomial name, or binomial, comes from the. ..) Smilisca baudinii
(Duméril et Bibron, 1841) Synonyms Hyla baudinii Duméril & Bibron, 1841 Hyla vanvlietii Baird, 1854 Hyla vociferans Baird, 1859 Hyla muricolor Cope, 1862 Hyla pansosana Brocchi, 1877 Hyla beltrani Taylor, 1942 Hyla manisorum Taylor, 1954 IUCN conservation status :
LC: Least Concern
Smilisca baudinii
Smilisca baudinii (Honduras)
the Mexican tree frog (Mexican tree frog for Anglo-Saxons) Smilisca baudinii is a species (In life sciences, the species (from the Latin species, “type”) of amphibian of the Hylidae family.
Distribution and Habitat
It is found in the tropical and equatorial zone of the Americas; in Texas, Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
It is a nocturnal forest species, which appreciates the forest (A forest or a forest massif is a wooded expanse, relatively dense,…) semi-open and the proximity of points or sources of water (Water is a ubiquitous chemical compound on Earth, essential for all permanent…)
Taxonomy
This species has many synonyms in the classification, due to the existence of disjunct populations that have been described under different names by different groups of researchers;
Description
Color (Color is the eye’s subjective perception of one or more wave frequencies…) and pattern vary across subpopulations and geographic areas. The coat is generally rather brown-green with darker brown spots, following an irregular pattern. The belly is typically light gray to white (White is the color of a body heated to around 5000°C (see… Legs with suction cup toes bear distinctive black bands;
Original publication
Duméril & Bibron, 1841: General Erpetology or Complete Natural History of Reptiles, vol. 8, p. 1-792 (full text).
Conservation Status and Threats
Amphibians seem globally in rapid decline throughout America (America is a separate continent, to the west, from Asia and …), and elsewhere, for reasons still poorly understood, probably multifactorial (pollution diffused by pesticides, emerging pathologies, endocrine disruptors, habitat destruction, eco-landscape fragmentation, including by light pollution (The expression light pollution (light pollution, or photopollution for English speakers)…) This species is considered as threatened in Texas. It is known only in a few localities in the USA where no global census (The census is a statistical operation of enumeration of a population.) has been made to date (The day or the day is the interval between sunrise and sunset; it is…).
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