Purple Frog Leaps Into Species Book
The chubby, seven-centimeter (three-inch) beast has been dubbed Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis, from the Sanskrit word for nose (nasika); batrachus, meaning frog; and Sahyadri, the name for the hills along the western Indian coast that are also called the Western Ghats.
N. sahyadrensis, according to its discoverers, is no ordinary frog.
Indeed, in evolutionary terms, it is of royal lineage, being the very last representative of the kinds of frogs that hopped around the feet of the dinosaurs in the Cretaceous period, more than 65 million years ago.
Its finders, S.D. Biju of the Tropical Botanic Garden and Research Institute in Kerala and Franky Bossuyt, also say N. sahyandrensis' DNA shares a link with sooglossids.
These are a small, clannish family of frogs that live across the Indian Ocean, in the Seychelles.
The genetic resemblance, they say, supports the theory that, millions of years of ago, the ancestor of both frogs lived on Gondwana, a "supercontinent" in which the Earth's continents were glommed together.
Eventually, Gondwanwa split up into two landmasses, one comprising Africa and South America, the other comprising Australia, Antarctica and Indo-Madagascar.
The Nasikabatrachidae/Sooglossidae ancestors were on the Indo-Madagascan fragment.
This, in turn, broke up and drifted apart to form the Indian subcontinent and islands in the Indian Ocean, and the frogs evolved separately according to their habitat, the pair write in Thursday's issue of Nature, the British science weekly.