Tachygyia microlepis (DUMÉRIL & BIBRON, 1839)
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Higher Taxa | Scincidae, Eugongylinae (Eugongylini), Scincoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | |
Synonym | Eumeces microlepis DUMÉRIL & BIBRON 1839: 659 Otosaurus microlepis — GRAY [1845?]: 93 Liosoma microlepis — FITZINGER 1843: 22 Lygosoma microlepis — BOULENGER 1887: 301 Riopa (Eugongylus) microlepis — SMITH 1937: 229 Tachygyia [sic] microlepis — MITTLEMAN 1952 Tachygia [sic] microlepis — GREER 1974: 14 Eugongylus microlepis — BÖHME 1976 Tachygyia [sic] microlepis — ADLER, AUSTIN & DUDLEY 1995 |
Distribution | Tonga Islands, Friendly Islands (fide SMITH 1937); Tongatabu (fide BOULENGER 1887). Type locality: Tongatabou |
Reproduction | |
Types | Syntypes: MNHN-RA 2919 and MNHN-RA 5493, collected by Quoy & Gaimard. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (genus): “Differs essentially from Riopa as follows: lower eyelid scaly, lacking a more or less transparent or translucent disc; frontoparietals united, interparietal reduced; limbs very robust and long, broadly overlapping when appressed” (MITTLEMAN (1952) Additional details (179 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Conservation: Apparently extinct (Ineich and Zug 1996). The first and only record of this Tongan lizard is from the early nineteenth-century report of the L’Astrolabe expedition (Dumont d’Urville 1832) when they were discovered. Ineich and Böhme 2024 believe that t. microlepis is still extant in Southern Tonga. Distribution: Erroneously reported from New Zealand. Synonymy partly after BOULENGER 1887. Type species: Eumeces microlepis is the type species of the genus Tachygyia MITTLEMAN 1952. Abundance: only known from its original description (Meiri et al. 2017). |
Etymology | Named after micro (= small) and Greek “lepis” = scale, referring to the large number of small scales around midbody in this species. The genus was named after the Greek word tachys meaning “fast” and gyia, always used in plural, meaning “articulation of a limb” (such as elbow or knee joint) or just “limb with an articulation”. |
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