Pipoidea
Pipoidea are a clade of frogs that have variously been defined as a suborder, superfamily, or an unranked node-based taxon. There is no single, authoritative higher-level classification of frogs, and Vitt and Caldwell use name Xenoanura for a similar clade, skipping Pipoidea altogether, as did Frost et al..
In 1993 Pipoidea was defined by Ford and Cannatella as the node-based taxon that contains the most recent common ancestor of living Pipidae and Rhinophrynidae as well as all its descendants:
"Pipids" are a group of fossil taxa with uncertain relationships: Thoraciliacus, Nevobatrachus, Saltenia, and Eoxenopoides. Cannatella added Shomronella to this group.
The synapomorphies that define Pipoidea are the absence of bones, absence of lateral alae of the parasphenoid, fusion of the frontoparietals into an, greatly enlarged otic capsules, and a tadpole with paired spiracles and which lacks beaks and denticles. Later genetic work has supported Pipoidea as a monophyletic group.