Published April 20, 2023 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Desmognathus aureatus

Description

Desmognathus aureatus (Martof, 1956)

Leurognathus marmorata aureata Martof, 1956

Leurognathus marmorata roborata Martof, 1956, holotype UMMZ 111568 by original designation, collected 18 September 1954 by “the Bernard Martof family,” type locality “Reed Creek, along Burrell Ford Road, 0.5 of a mile from its junction with Glade School Road, about 3.5 miles northwest of Pine Mountain Community, Rabun County, Georgia; 2,350 feet elevation.” Paratypes UMMZ 111569 (lot of 26 specimens); same data. Informally synonymized with L. marmorata by Martof (1962) and resurrected by Dubois and Raffaëlli (2012) based on a suggestion by Jones et al. (2006). Here designated a junior subjective synonym of D. aureatus.

Holotype: UMMZ 111566 by original designation, collected 11 September 1954 by “ Stephen and Andrew Martof,” type locality “ Jarrard’s Creek, 0.2 of a mile below its crossing of U.S. Route 19, about 9 air miles north-northeast of Dahlonega, Lumpkin County, Georgia; 1,550 feet elevation.”

Paratypes: UMMZ 111567 (lot of 20 specimens); “data as for the holotype.”

Description: After Martof (1956), adults of this species have no vomerine teeth (versus presence in Desmognathus intermedius and D. marmoratus [some females]); ventral color-pattern pale or mottled (versus dark or black in other Blue Ridge lineages); and dark brown to black background of dorsum with dorsal color-pattern consisting of paired, golden, marbled or lichenous blotches (albeit less distinct in northeastern populations previously assigned to L. m. roborata Martof, 1956). These characters should be re-evaluated for diagnostic consistency. In our sample, this is the smallest shovel-nosed species, with metamorphosed SVL = 34–73mm. Based on our size-corrected linear morphometric analyses, this species can be distinguished from D. intermedius by a shorter trunk (AG in original measurements = 17–40mm) and from D. marmoratus by a longer head (SG in original measurements = 8.1–17.1mm). From Martof (1962), females at sites in Georgia develop sexual maturity around 55–59mm SVL, typically laying 27– 54 eggs from May to July, with clutch size dependent on body size. Hatchlings are as small as 10–12mm SVL and metamorphose at 25–38mm (usually ~30) after 10–20 months, though up to three distinct size classes at some suggest possibly longer periods up to ~36 months. Larvae and adults are primarily insectivorous, likely preying opportunistically on available aquatic invertebrates (Martof and Scott 1957). Adults in some Georgia populations are occasionally bright yellow, a characteristic that apparently shifts rapidly in frequency within populations over short timescales (Martof and Walton 1965).

Range: The Blue Ridge Mountains of northeastern Georgia, northwestern South Carolina, and small portions of the nearby border regions of North Carolina, in headwater streams of the Chattahoochee, Chattooga, and Tallulah River drainages (Fig. 1; Voss et al. 1995; Jones et al. 2006). Elevational range ~ 400–1100m.

Habitat: As with all shovel-nosed salamanders, occurs almost exclusively in the rocky riffle zones of a fast-flowing, high-gradient mountain streams.

Etymology: The specific epithet is a Latin singular adjective in the nominative case meaning “adorned with gold,” in reference to the dorsal coloration (Fig. 7).

Standard English Names: For Desmognathus aureatus: Golden Shovel-nosed Salamander (Conant 1958); for Leurognathus marmoratus roboratus Martof, 1956: Husky Shovel-nosed Salamander (Conant 1958). We suggest that “Southern” Shovel-nosed Salamander is more appropriate.

Conservation: This species is apparently widespread and abundant at numerous historical and recent sites across its range, a significant proportion of which is protected by state, federal, and private entities. Consequently, we suggest that it be considered “LC—Least Concern” based on available data (Maes et al. 2015).

Notes: Implicitly synonymized with Leurognathus marmoratus (Moore, 1899) by Martof (1962). Indirectly suggested for resurrection by Jones et al. (2006), though this was essentially ignored. Later explicitly resurrected by Dubois and Raffaëlli (2012), though few subsequent authorities followed this arrangement. Part of the Nantahala clade (Jones and Weisrock 2018; Pyron et al. 2020, 2022c) and the sister lineage of the Dwarf Black-bellied Salamander Desmognathus folkertsi Camp, Tilley, Austin, & Marshall, 2002. The presence of the shovel-nosed phenotype in this lineage may have been transmitted to or from the Pisgah clade via an episode of ancient adaptive introgression (Pyron et al. 2020).

Within the Pisgah clade, Beamer and Lamb (2020) and Pyron et al. (2020, 2022c) sampled specimens from the type localities of Leurognathus marmorata intermedia Pope, 1928 and L. m. melania Martof, 1956, which were highly similar genetically and belonged to the marmoratus C lineage. Therefore, we conclude that marmoratus C should be referred to as Desmognathus intermedius (Pope, 1928), including D. melanius (Martof 1956) in synonymy. Consequently, the species D. melanius recognized by Frost (2019) following Dubois and Raffaëlli (2012) and Raffaëlli (2013) is not valid but is instead preoccupied by:

Notes

Published as part of Pyron, R. Alexander & Beamer, David A., 2023, A systematic revision of the Shovel-nosed Salamander (Plethodontidae: Desmognathus marmoratus), with re-description of the related D. aureatus and D. intermedius, pp. 262-280 in Zootaxa 5270 (2) on pages 273-274, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5270.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/7850637

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
UMMZ
Event date
1954-09-11
Family
Plethodontidae
Genus
Desmognathus
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
UMMZ 111566 , UMMZ 111567
Order
Caudata
Phylum
Chordata
Scientific name authorship
Martof
Species
aureatus
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , paratype
Verbatim event date
1954-09-11
Taxonomic concept label
Desmognathus aureatus (Martof, 1956) sec. Pyron & Beamer, 2023

References

  • Martof, B. S. (1956) Three new subspecies of Leurognathus marmorata from the southern Appalachian Mountains. Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 575, 1 - 14.
  • Martof, B. S. (1962) Some aspects of the life history and ecology of the salamander Leurognathus. American Midland Naturalist, 67, 1 - 35. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 2422814
  • Dubois, A. & Raffaelli, J. (2012) A new ergotaxonomy of the order Urodela Dumeril, 1805 (Amphibia, Batrachia). Alytes, 28, 77 - 161.
  • Jones, M. T., Voss, S. R., Ptacek, M. B., Weisrock, D. W. & Tonkyn, D. W. (2006) River drainages and phylogeography: an evolutionary significant lineage of shovel-nosed salamander (Desmognathus marmoratus) in the southern Appalachians. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 38, 280 - 287. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. ympev. 2005.05.007
  • Martof, B. S. & Scott, D. C. (1957) The food of the salamander Leurognathus. Ecology, 38, 494 - 501. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 1929894
  • Martof, B. S. & Walton, K. G. (1965) A study of the unusual pigmentation in the salamander Leurognathus marmoratus. Physiological Zoology, 38, 349 - 352. https: // doi. org / 10.1086 / physzool. 38.4.30152412
  • Voss, S. R., Smith, D. G., Beachy, C. K. & Heckel, D. G. (1995) Allozyme variation in neighboring isolated populations of the plethodontid salamander Leurognathus marmoratus. Journal of Herpetology, 29, 493 - 497. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 1565011
  • Conant, R. (1958) A field guide to reptiles and amphibians. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 598 pp.
  • Maes, D., Isaac, N. J. B., Harrower, C. A., Collen, B., van Strien, A. J. & Roy, D. B. (2015) The use of opportunistic data for IUCN Red List assessments. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 115, 690 - 706. https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / bij. 12530
  • Moore, J. P. (1899) Leurognathus marmorata, a new genus and species of salamander of the family Desmognathidae. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 51, 316 - 323.
  • Jones, K. S. & Weisrock, D. W. (2018) Genomic data reject the hypothesis of sympatric ecological speciation in a clade of Desmognathus salamanders. Evolution, 72, 2378 - 2393. https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / evo. 13606
  • Beamer, D. A. & Lamb, T. (2020) Towards rectifying limitations on species delineation in dusky salamanders (Desmognathus: Plethodontidae): an ecoregion-drainage sampling grid reveals additional cryptic clades. Zootaxa, 4734 (1), 1 - 61. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4734.1.1
  • Pope, C. H. (1928) Some plethodontid salamanders from North Carolina and Kentucky, with the description of a new race of Leurognathus. American Museum Novitates, 306, 1 - 19.
  • Frost, D. R. (2019) Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.1. American Museum of Natural History, New York, New York. Available from: https: // amphibiansoftheworld. amnh. org / (accessed 1 January 2023)
  • Raffaelli, J. (2013) Les urodeles du monde. Deuxieme Edition. Plumelec, Penclen, 480 pp.