Tropical Platanna (Xenopus muelleri)

View the above photo record (by Alan Manson) in FrogMAP here.

Find the Tropical Platanna in the FBIS database (Freshwater Biodiversity Information System) here.

Family Pipidae

TROPICAL PLATANNA – Xenopus muelleri

(Peters, 1844)

Habitat

X. muelleri inhabits all types of water bodies, including lowland rivers, lagoons, dams and pans (Poynton and Broadley 1985a), mainly in the Grassland and Savanna biomes. It is seldom found in pristine forest habitats, but readily moves into deforested areas (Tinsley et al. 1996).

X. muelleri and X. laevis do not appear to differ with regard to water-quality preferences or requirements. The apparent difference in temperature tolerance does not seem to apply in southern Namibia, where X. laevis occurs at temperatures at least as high as those from which it is apparently excluded in the east (Tinsley et al. 1996). A possible explanation is that X. laevis uses cool refugia within high temperature water bodies. This has been observed in extralimital populations of X. laevis (pers. obs.). Absence of such refugia from some sites would explain the observations of Lambiris (1989a) and Poynton and Broadley (1985a) that the two species are rarely found at the same site.

Behaviour

Little is known specifically about the life history of X. muelleri, although much can be inferred from the characteristics of the rest of the genus. Like other Xenopus, they are known to move en masse, even under dry conditions (Tinsley et al. 1996). Loveridge (1953a) found them aestivating in the mud of a dried pond.

Prey items include beetles, beetle larvae and frogs’ eggs (Barbour and Loveridge 1928), while predators include Hammerkop Scopus umbretta (Loveridge 1953a), Green Water-snake Philothamnus irregularis (Sweeney 1961) and Barbel Clarias gariepinus. X. muelleri has been observed leaving the water to escape barbel (L.R. Minter pers. comm.)

Status and Conservation

X. muelleri is not threatened, and does not warrant conservation action.

Distribution

The distribution of X. muelleri in sub-Saharan Africa is divided into two distinct areas containing animals that are morphologically similar but probably represent allopatric sibling species (Kobel et al. 1996). One of these forms, X. muelleri-East, extends from southeastern Kenya to South Africa, and is the only form in the atlas region. This form includes the type material (from Mozambique), and hence is hereafter referred to as X. muelleri.

Within the atlas region, this species is confined to low-lying areas in northern and eastern Limpopo Province, eastern Mpumalanga and Swaziland, and northeastern KwaZulu-Natal, which form the western and southern limits of the Mozambique plain. Although Fischer et al. (2000) recorded mixed populations and hybridization between X. muelleri and laevis in Mpumalanga (2430BD), the two species are largely allopatric.

The ranges of X. muelleri and laevis are separated by the 18°C mean July isotherm, with muelleri part of a tropical faunal assemblage north and east of this climatic boundary, and laevis part of a non-tropical assemblage distributed to the south and west of the isotherm (Poynton 1964; Poynton and Broadley 1991). It is possible that the distribution of the species reflects differences in temperature tolerance: X. laevis appears to be able to tolerate a wider range of environmental temperatures than X. muelleri, which is more tolerant of high temperatures (Tinsley et al. 1996; see discussion under Habitat).

The atlas data can be regarded as reliable as X. muelleri can be easily distinguished, morphologically, from X. laevis.

Distribution of Xenopus muelleri. Taken from the FrogMAP database as at February 2022.

Further Resources

Virtual Museum (FrogMAP > Search VM > By Scientific or Common Name)

More common names: Müller’s PlatannaMüller’s Clawed Toad (Alternative English Names); Müller se Platanna, Tropiese Platanna (Afrikaans)

Recommended citation format for this species text:

Measey GJ, Tippett RM.  Tropical Platanna Xenopus muelleri. BDI, Cape Town.
Available online at http://thebdi.org/2022/02/08/tropical-platanna-xenopus-muelleri/

Recommended citation format: 

This species text has been updated and expanded from the text in the
2004 frog atlas. The reference to the text and the book are as follows:

Measey GJ 2004 Xenopus muelleri Tropical Platanna. In Minter LR
et al 2004.

Minter LR, Burger M, Harrison JA, Braack HH, Bishop PJ, Kloepfer D (eds)
2004. Atlas and Red Data Book of  the Frogs of South Africa, Lesotho and
Swaziland. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, and Avian Demography
Unit, Cape Town.

Ryan Tippett
Ryan Tippett
Ryan is an enthusiastic contributor to Citizen Science and has added many important and interesting records of fauna and flora. He has been a member of the Virtual Museum since 2014 and has currently submitted over 12,000 records. He is on the expert identification panel for the OdonataMAP project. Ryan is a well-qualified and experienced Field Guide, and Guide Training Instructor. He has spent the last 18 years in the guiding and tourism industries. Ryan loves imparting his passion and knowledge onto others, and it is this that drew him into guide training in particular. Something that he finds incredibly rewarding is seeing how people he's had the privilege of teaching have developed and gone on to greater things. His interests are diverse and include Dragonflies, Birding, Arachnids, Amphibians, wild flowers and succulents, free diving and experiencing big game on foot. With this range of interests, there is always likely be something special just around the corner!