Frogs rafted from South America to the Caribbean 29M years ago
Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com
June 4, 2007
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Genetic analysis of eleutherodactyline frogs--species that breed out of water and lay eggs that undergo direct development on land, bypassing the tadpole stage--revealed three major and geographically defined groups of amphibians (North American, Caribbean and South American "clades"), a finding that enabled scientists Matthew P. Heinicke, William E. Duellman, and S. Blair Hedges to reject the prevailing theory that these frogs arose from land connections between North and South America.
There are more than 700 species of Eleutherodactylus frogs, making it the largest vertebrate genus.
Matthew P. Heinicke, William E. Duellman, and S. Blair Hedges (2007). "Major Caribbean and Central American frog faunas originated by ancient oceanic dispersal." PNAS June 4 www.pnas.orgcgidoi10.1073pnas.0611051104
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