PIPIDS OF THE WORLD: Pipidae Distribution Database
Xenopus andrei
- Cameroun: Longji (03°04'31''N, 09°58'40''E) — "Longyi (à 200 m de la plage), Nord de Kribii, Cameroon", , 1981-05, 7 spms: MHNG 2088.32 (f, 38 mm, holotype) + 6 kept alive at Station de Zoologie expérimentale, Genève, sympatric with S. epitropicalis [1] — "Longyi (type locality), Cameroon", , , 1 spm: MHNG 2644.51 [2].
- Centrafrique: Bouchia (03°45'N, 18°10'E) — "Bouchia (450 m), approx. 40 km Southeast of M'Baiki, lower Lobaye River, southern Central African Republic", Loumont, 1984, 65 spms: sympatric with X. muelleri, X. pygmaeus, S. epitropicalis [3].
- Centrafrique: Etoi (03°40'N, 17°40'E) — "Etoi (420 m), lower Lobaye River, southern Central African Republic", Loumont, 1984, See map on p. 760 in Loumont, 1986 [3].
- Gabon: Makokou (00°34'N, 12°52'E) — "Makokou, Gabon", , 1982, Thiébaud mission, U. Biology, Geneva [4].
- Gabon: Mékambo (01°01'N, 13°56'E) — "Mekambo, Gabon", , , [3].
References
- Loumont, Catherine (1983): Deux espèces nouvelles de Xenopus du Cameroun (Amphibia, Pipidae). - Revue suisse de Zoologie, 90(1): 169-177.
- Evans, Ben J., Darcy B. Kelley, Richard C. Tinsley, Don J. Melnick & David C. Cannatella (2004): A mitochondrial DNA phylogeny of African clawed frogs: phylogeography and implications for polyploid evolution. - Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution, 33(1): 197-213.
- Loumont, Catherine (1986): Xenopus pygmaeus, a new diploid pipid frog from rain forest of equatorial Africa. - Revue suisse de Zoologie, 93(3): 755-764.
- Loumont, Catherine (1984): Current distribution of the genus Xenopus in Africa and future prospects. - Revue suisse de Zoologie, 91(3): 725-746.