Although a few groups are primarilyterrestrial, rhacophorids are predominantlyarboreal treefrogs. Mating frogs, while inamplexus, hold on to a branch, and beat their legs to form a foam. The eggs are laid in the foam and covered with seminal fluid before the foam hardens into a protective casing. In certain species, this process occurs collectively. The foam is deposited above a water source, ensuring that the tadpoles drop into the water upon hatching.[1]
The species within this family vary in size from 1.5 to 12 cm (0.59 to 4.72 in).[1] Like other arboreal frogs, they have toe discs, and those of the genusChiromantis have two opposable fingers on each hand. This family also contains the Old Worldflying frogs, including Wallace's flying frog (Rhacophorus nigropalmatus). These frogs have extensive webbing between their fore and hind limbs, allowing them to glide through the air.[2]
The Rhacophoridae are thesister group to theMantellidae, a family of frogs restricted toMadagascar. Both families are thought to have diverged during thePaleocene, although previous studies estimated aCretaceous divergence. Two different hypotheses for this divergence have been proposed: one that the Mantellidae and Rhacophoridae diverged whenInsular India broke from Madagascar, with the Rhacophoridae colonizing the rest of Asia following the collision of India with Asia, and the other proposing that the common ancestors of both families inhabited Asia, with the ancestral Mantellidae colonizing Madagascar from India vialong-distance dispersal, using India as a stepping stone.[3][4]
Amboli bush frog (Pseudophilautus amboli), a member of the Rhacophoridae, with enlarged vocal sac for mating calls
As many frogs, rhacophorids harbourmonogenean worms in theirurinary bladders. The parasite species specialized to this family of frogs belong to thegenusIndopolystoma, described in 2019.[7]
^abZweifel, Richard G. (1998). Cogger, H.G.; Zweifel, R.G. (eds.).Encyclopedia of Reptiles and Amphibians. San Diego: Academic Press. pp. 99–100.ISBN0-12-178560-2.
^Robin Kurian Abraham; R. Alexander Pyron; Ansil B. R.; Arun Zachariah; Anil Zachariah (2013). "Two novel genera and one new species of treefrog (Anura: Rhacophoridae) highlight cryptic diversity in the Western Ghats of India".Zootaxa.3640 (2):177–189.doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3640.2.3.PMID26000411.
^Yu Guohua, Rao Dingqi, Zhang Mingwang, Yang Junxing. Re-examination of the phylogeny of Rhacophoridae (Anura) based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 50 (2009) 571–579. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2008.11.023