Thermal tolerance for the tropical clawed frog, Xenopus tropicalis with comments on comparative methods for amphibian studies

QM Tuckett, JE Hill, K Everett, C Goodman… - Journal of Thermal …, 2024 - Elsevier
Thermal tolerance data are important for identifying the potential range of non-native
species following introduction and establishment. Such data are particularly important for …

[HTML][HTML]  Morphological, acoustic and genetic identification of a reproducing population of the invasive African clawed frog Xenopuslaevis (Anura, Pipidae) recently …

OSG Pauwels, J Brecko, D Baeghe, J Venderickx… - ZooKeys, 2023 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
 Abstract Using external morphology of adults and tadpoles, osteology from high-resolution
microcomputed tomography, vocalization analysis, and DNA sequence data, the identity of a …

[PDF][PDF] Coming home: Back-introduced invasive genotypes might pose an underestimated risk in the species´ native range

LY Watermann, J Rotert, A Erfmeier - NeoBiota, 2022 - neobiota.pensoft.net
Biological invasions are considered a significant challenge both from an ecological and
economical perspective. Compared to the native range, environmental conditions in the …

[PDF][PDF] First record of a caecilian (order Gymnophiona, Typhlonectes natans) in Florida and in the United States

C Sheehy, D Blackburn, M Kouete, K Gestring… - Reptiles & …, 2021 - journals.ku.edu
Acosta-Galvis 2010; AmphibiaWeb 2021). The two species are similar in appearance, but
can be differentiated by the relative width of the head (head wider than body in T. natans …