Lehtinen Names One of Latest Frog Species Discoveries After Wooster

WOOSTER, Ohio 鈥 Small with a specialized niche. Sound familiar? That鈥檚 how Rick Lehtinen describes one of his latest discoveries 鈥 a frog species in northern Madagascar 鈥 and it could also be applied to , where he has served as a faculty member going on 16 years.
Maybe that鈥檚 why, on a subconscious level anyway, Lehtinen decided to name this particular new species after the place he has taught, researched, and thrived at. In actuality, the scientific name Guibemantis woosteri was given because he wanted to 鈥渟how (his) appreciation and love for the school and dedicate it to the College and its faculty, staff, students, and alumni in celebration of 150 years of educational excellence.鈥
Though, Wooster鈥檚 sesquicentennial celebration took place in the fall of 2016, Lehtinen鈥檚 discovery just became officially published in the European Journal of Taxonomy . In it, he is the lead author of finding two new species 鈥 Guibemantis albomaculatus is the other 鈥 both found in the leafy pandanus trees that fill the rain forests of Madagascar.
Unbeknownst to him at the time, Lehtinen set the stage for these discoveries by spending 11 months (over a period from 1999-2002) in Madagascar while working towards a Ph.D. at the University of Michigan. Fascinated by a tropical world that had been not been very well explored, he began studying the hundreds of frog species there and it has 鈥渒ind of snowballed since then鈥 into one of his primary research areas.
The discovery of a new species is a lengthy, and sometimes painstakingly slow, process. Lehtinen, frequently hunched over a microscope, took measurements of the tiny frogs鈥 body parts, both in Wooster (after borrowing from museum collections), and on research leaves, and the DNA began to reveal possible new species. Further collaboration with fellow experts Frank Glaw and Miguel Vences confirmed it.
As for G. woosteri, the frog is slightly bigger than one鈥檚 thumbnail and 鈥渃ould comfortably sit on a quarter,鈥 according to Lehtinen. It has 鈥渓ight-colored dorsolateral stripes and small white spots, but differs by having strongly banded forelimbs and a reddish coloration around the eye orbits,鈥 and what truly sets it apart from other species is its habitat, the 鈥渕icroaquatic environments鈥 of pandanus leaves, as opposed to breeding and living in ponds or other water bodies like most frogs.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e a little bit unusual. They don鈥檛 do the normal frog thing. They break the mold,鈥 said Lehtinen, who has now been formally credited with six discoveries of new species.
And, it is likely just a matter of time before that list grows. There are another 10 species within this group that have yet to be described, and for Lehtinen, it is an honor and a passion to be part of that process. 鈥淪ome people think 鈥榯his is the 21st century, we know everything out there,鈥 but that鈥檚 really not true,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭his, and many other projects ongoing 鈥 keep me passionate about being here. You are contributing to the world鈥檚 knowledge, which is an important source of motivation.鈥
Posted in Faculty, News on August 22, 2018.
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