
Nanorana is a genus of dicroglossid frogs. They are found in Asia, from the Himalayan region of northern Pakistan and northern India, Nepal, and western China east to montane southern China and southeast to Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and northern Vietnam. Common names of these frogs reflect the complex taxonomic history of the genus (see below) and include Yunnan slow frogs (or simply slow frogs) and High Himalaya frogs (for the now-synonymized genus Altirana).
GENUS
Herpetologie Nanorana is een geslacht van kikkers uit de familie Dicroglossidae.[1] De groep werd voor het eerst wetenschappelijk beschreven door Albert Carl Lewis Gotthilf Günther in 1896. Later werd abusievelijk de wetenschappelijke naam Nannorana gebruikt. Er zijn 28 soorten die voorkomen in delen van Azië en leven in de landen Afghanistan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Thailand en Vietnam.[2] Soorten Soort Nanorana aenea Soort Nanorana annandalii Soort Nanorana arnoldi Soort Nanorana blanfordii Soort Nanorana bourreti Soort Nanorana chayuensis Soort Nanorana conaensis Soort Nanorana ercepeae Soort Nanorana feae Soort Nanorana gammii Soort Nanorana kangxianensis Soort Nanorana liebigii Soort Nanorana liui Soort Nanorana maculosa Soort Nanorana medogensis Soort Nanorana minica Soort Nanorana mokokchungensis Soort Nanorana parkeri Soort Nanorana pleskei Soort Nanorana polunini Soort Nanorana quadranus Soort Nanorana rarica Soort Nanorana rostandi Soort Nanorana taihangnica Soort Nanorana unculuanus Soort Nanorana ventripunctata Soort Nanorana vicina Soort Nanorana yunnanensis Referenties ↑ Darrel R. Frost - Amphibian Species of the World: an online reference - Version 6.
via GBIF
Nanorana is a genus of dicroglossid frogs. They are found in Asia, from the Himalayan region of northern Pakistan and northern India, Nepal, and western China east to montane southern China and southeast to Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and northern Vietnam. Common names of these frogs reflect the complex taxonomic history of the genus (see below) and include Yunnan slow frogs (or simply slow frogs) and High Himalaya frogs (for the now-synonymized genus Altirana).
==Taxonomy== The taxonomy of true frogs and their allies has been subject to numerous changes during the last decade and is not yet fully settled. Nanorana in particular has seen big changes. As currently delineated, Nanorana is a quite large genus with 28 species, resulting from considering Chaparana, Paa, and Feirana as junior synonyms. Currently these taxa may be recognized as subgenera, but their delineation is not entirely settled and not all species have been assigned to subgenera. Note, however, that species at one point placed in these (sub)genera might currently be placed also in genera other than Nanorana (Quasipaa, Ombrana, and Allopaa).
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).