Ctenotus labillardieri (DUMÉRIL & BIBRON, 1839)
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| Higher Taxa | Scincidae, Sphenomorphinae (Sphenomorphini), Scincoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
| Subspecies | |
| Common Names | E: Common South-west Ctenotus |
| Synonym | Tiliqua labillardi GRAY 1838 (nomen nudum) Gongylus (Lygosoma) labillardieri DUMÉRIL & BIBRON 1839: 731 Hinulia greyii GRAY 1845: 76 Lygosoma (Hinulia) labillardieri — WERNER 1910: 476 Lygosoma (Sphenomorphus) labillardiri [sic] — SMITH 1937: 220 Lygosoma (Sphenomorphus) labillardieri — FORD 1963 Sphenomorphus labillardieri — LIGHT et al. 1966 Sphenomorphus labillardieri — DAWSON et al. 1966 Ctenotus labillardieri — COGGER 1983: 148 Ctenotus labillardieri — COGGER 2000: 430 Ctenotus labillardieri — WILSON & SWAN 2010 |
| Distribution | Australia (Western Australia) Type locality: Australia and Waigeo (as Waigieu) and Rawack Ils., Indonesia |
| Reproduction | oviparous |
| Types | Syntypes: MNHN-RA 2980 (3 specimens), New Holland, collected Péron & Lesueur; 2981 (2934), 2981A, New Holland, collected Labillardière; 7117 (2932), 7117A, New Holland, collected Quoy & Gaimard (Roux-Estève 1979). Syntypes: MNHN-RA 1994.1247 (formerly 2980A) and MNHN-RA 1994.1248 (formerly MNHN-RA 2980B) not indicated a types in MNHN catalogue, cited as "type" by Roux-Estève (1979). Holotype: BMNH 1946. 8. 19. 57, from Swan River, W. A. [Hinulia greyii] |
| Diagnosis | Diagnosis: A member of the labillardieri group with reddish legs heavily marked with black. Further distinguishable from gemmula, delli and catenifer by the white dorsolateral line con tinuous ii.e. not broken into a series of short dashes) (Storr 1974: 90). Unfortunately we had to temporarily remove additional information as this was scraped by multiple AI companies who sell that data. However, these details, e.g. detailed descriptions (about between half a page and a page) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us if you need any of this material. |
| Comment | Synonymy after COGGER 1983. Limb morphology: 5 digits, 5 toes (Singhal et al. 2018, Cogger 2014) |
| Etymology | Named after Jacques J. H. de Labillardière (1755-1834) was a naval surgeon who served as botanist on the “Recherche” expedition (1791-1793). |
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