Desmognathus ocoee Nicholls 1949
Authors/Creators
- 1. Department of Biological Sciences, The George Washington University, 2029 G St. NW, Washington, DC 20052 rpyron @ colubroid. org; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 2524 - 1794 & Division of Amphibians and Reptiles, Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560
- 2. Department of Natural Science, Nash Community College, 522 N. Old Carriage Road, Rocky Mount, NC 27804 dabeamer 973 @ nashcc. edu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0796 - 274 X & Amphibian Foundation, 4055 Roswell Rd NE, Atlanta, Georgia 30342
Description
Desmognathus ocoee Nicholls, 1949
Holotype: USNM 128007 (field tag J.C.N. 1001; Fig. 1) by original designation; type locality “on the surface and in crevices of cliffs at Ship’s Prow Rock, in Ocoee Gorge, beside U.S. Highway 64, nine miles airline west of Ducktown, in Polk County, Tennessee,” collected 14 November 1948 by J.C. Nicholls, Jr.
Paratypes: A series of 28 specimens including the holotype was reported, so ostensibly 27, including untraceable specimens in the “ J. C. Nicholls, Jr. collection” and the “ S. C. Bishop collection, Rochester, New York,” AMNH A-54385–6, CM 29290–1, MCZ A-26589–90 & A-28307 (MCZ catalog notes received in “ Exch. Chicago N.H. Mus. ”—original number CNHM [now FMNH] 90035), FMNH (originally given as “Chicago Natural History Museum, Chicago, Ill.”— CNHM) 57313–4 & 90034–5 (FMNH 90035 now MCZ A-28307), and untraceable specimens at “Emory University, Emory University, Ga.”
Description: A small (~ 15–54mm SVL; n = 122) mountain dusky salamander exhibiting a wide variety of color patterns and ecomorphologies throughout its range. Diagnosable from Desmognathus abditus in the Cumberland Plateau by the presence of a modest keel on the distal portion of the tail and keratinized toe tips (Fig. 20; vs. absence of both, see Drukker et al. 2018). Usually diagnosable from D. adatsihi and D. balsameus by generally lacking a solid dorsal stripe (vs. often striped with straight, wavy, or undulating borders). Some individuals of the ocoee E lineage are diagnosable from all other species by the presence of red, yellow, or orange patches on the legs or very rarely both the legs and cheeks, and all species other than D. imitator and D. perlapsus by the presence of such patches on the cheeks. Neill (1950) suggested seven diagnostic characters differentiating D. ocoee from D. perlapsus, with D. ocoee being smaller, having a shorter and narrower head, longer limbs, no vomerine teeth in adult males, parasphenoid teeth in oblong patches, more-defined dorsal color pattern, and 5–6 pairs of spots (vs. 4) on the dorsum between the limb insertions. However, Valentine (1961) demonstrated exceptional variability in these traits in both species and questioned this diagnosis. Additional work is needed to diagnose this taxon morphometrically.
Range: Three disjunct population segments (Fig. 4); one restricted to a small portion of the Cumberland Plateau between Sewanee and Orme, Tennessee in Franklin and Marion Counties; a second occurring broadly on the Cumberland Escarpment (Walden Ridge and Sand Mountain) of south-central Tennessee, extreme northwestern Georgia, and northeastern Alabama (see Anderson & Tilley 2003); and a third in the Nantahala, Unicoi, and southern Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina, southeastern Tennessee, and north-central Georgia. Additional populations probably referable to this species likely remain to be discovered and sampled. We examined a historical collection (MCZ A-143377–86) from Horse Cove, Rich Mountains (GA: Gilmer) which appears to be this species based on morphological gestalt and collected a single recent individual ourselves (Fig. 21). We have also received anecdotal reports from the Cohutta Mountains in Georgia (Fig. 4), due south of the type locality along the same general mountain range (S.P. Graham, pers. comm.), and their identity is of great interest.
Etymology: Named after the type locality in Ocoee Gorge. Various informal sources report “ocoee” as a Cherokee name for the Passionflower, Passiflora incarnata (e.g., the state symbol of Tennessee; https://www. tn.gov/about-tn/state-symbols.html). Name is a non-Latin noun used in apposition. The widely-used common name is “ Ocoee Salamander ” (Schmidt 1953).
Notes: Consists of the D. ocoee concept of Tilley & Mahoney (1996) and Anderson & Tilley (2003) in part, the ocoee E–H lineages of Kozak et al. (2005) and Beamer and Lamb (2020), and the apalachicolae A2 lineage of Beamer & Lamb (2008) as defined by Pyron et al. (2022c). Future work may reach more subtle and complex taxonomic conclusions regarding the specific identity of the ocoee E and apalachicolae A2 lineages. Extensive data on the biology of this species exist but will need to be carefully disambiguated from D. perlapsus by reference to geography; see bibliographies in Valentine (1964) and Camp & Tilley (2005).
Notes
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Biodiversity
- Collection code
- AMNH, MCZ, CNHM, FMNH , MCZ, GA , USNM
- Material sample ID
- CM 29290-1, FMNH 90035 , USNM 128007
- Event date
- 1948-11-14
- Verbatim event date
- 1948-11-14
- Scientific name authorship
- Nicholls
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Phylum
- Chordata
- Order
- Caudata
- Family
- Plethodontidae
- Genus
- Desmognathus
- Species
- ocoee
- Taxon rank
- species
- Type status
- holotype , paratype
- Taxonomic concept label
- Desmognathus ocoee Nicholls, 1949 sec. Pyron & Beamer, 2022
References
- Nicholls, J. C. (1949) A new salamander of the genus Desmognathus from east Tennessee. Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science, 24, 127 - 129.
- Drukker, S. S., Cecala, K. K., Gould, P. R., McKenzie, B. A. & de Ven, C. V. (2018) The ecology and natural history of the Cumberland Dusky Salamander (Desmognathus abditus): distribution and demographics. Herpetological Conservation and Biology, 13, 33 - 46.
- Neill, W. T. (1950) A new species of salamander, genus Desmognathus, from Georgia. Research Division, Ross Allen's Reptile Institute, Silver Springs, Florida, 6 pp.
- Valentine, B. D. (1961) Variation and distribution of Desmognathus ocoee Nicholls (Amphibia: Plethodontidae). Copeia, 1961, 315 - 322. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 1439806
- Anderson, J. A. & Tilley, S. G. (2003) Systematics of the Desmognathus ochrophaeus complex in the Cumberland Plateau of Tennessee. Herpetological Monographs, 17, 75 - 110. https: // doi. org / 10.1655 / 0733 - 1347 (2003) 017 [0075: SOTDOC] 2.0. CO; 2
- Schmidt, K. P. (1953) A Check List of North American Amphibians and Reptiles. 6 th ed. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 280 pp.
- Tilley, S. G. & Mahoney, M. J. (1996) Patterns of genetic differentiation in salamanders of the Desmognathus ochrophaeus complex (Amphibia: Plethodontidae). Herpetological Monographs, 10, 1 - 42. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 1466979
- Kozak, K. H., Larson, A., Bonett, R. M. & Harmon, L. J. (2005) Phylogenetic analysis of ecomorphological divergence, community structure, and diversification rates in dusky salamanders (Plethodontidae: Desmognathus). Evolution, 59, 2000 - 2016. https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 0014 - 3820.2005. tb 01069. x
- 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
- Beamer, D. A. & Lamb, T. (2008) Dusky salamanders (Desmognathus, Plethodontidae) from the Coastal Plain: multiple independent lineages and their bearing on the molecular phylogeny of the genus. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 47, 143 - 153. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. ympev. 2008.01.015
- Pyron, R. A., O'Connell, K. A., Lemmon, E. M., Lemmon, A. R. & Beamer, D. A. (2022 c) Candidate-species delimitation in Desmognathus salamanders reveals gene flow across lineage boundaries, confounding phylogenetic estimation and clarifying hybrid zones. Ecology and Evolution, 12, e 8574. https: // doi. org / 10.1002 / ece 3.8574
- Valentine, B. D. (1964) Desmognathus ocoee. In: Reimer, W. J. (Ed.), Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles. Vol. 7. American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, Kensington, pp. 1 - 2.
- Camp, C. D. & Tilley, S. G. (2005) Desmognathus ocoee Nicholls, 1949: Ocoee Salamander. In: M. J. Lannoo (Ed), Amphibian declines: the conservation status of United States species. University of California Press, Los Angeles, California, pp. 719 - 721.