Austroablepharus kinghorni (COPLAND, 1947)
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Higher Taxa | Scincidae, Eugongylinae (Eugongylini), Scincoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Red-tailed Soil-crevice Skink |
Synonym | Ablepharus kinghorni COPLAND 1947: 282 Proablepharus kinghorni — FUHN 1969 Proablepharus kinghorni — GREER 1974: 18 Proablepharus kinghorni — COGGER 1983: 182 Proablepharus barklyensis WELLS & WELLINGTON 1985 Proablepharus kinghorni — COGGER 2000: 557 Proablepharus kinghorni — WILSON & SWAN 2010 Proablepharus kinghorni — SWAN et al 2017 Austroablepharus kinghorni — COUPER et al. 2018 |
Distribution | Australia (New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland) Type locality: Darling River, between Bourke (30.5° S, 145.58’ E) and Wilcannia (31.28° S, 143.13’ E'), N. S. W. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: AMS (AM) R6458 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (genus). A genus of small skinks (adult SVL ≤ 51mm ) with pentadactyl limbs, ≤ 24 midbody scale rows, ≥ 55 paravertebral scales, and ≥ 30 presacral vertebrae. Limbs narrowly to widely separated when adpressed. Supranasals absent and nasals undivided; prefrontals large, in contact or narrowly separated; eye moderate-sized with lower eyelid immovable, partially fused to upper eyelid to form a permanent spectacle but with a distinct slit between the lower eyelid and the supraciliaries (preablepharine); frontoparietals fused; interparietal free or fused; ear opening very small; parietals in contact; body pattern consisting of alternating pale and dark stripes (each dorsal body scale with a pale centre and dark lateral edges); adult tail colouration red/orange [from Couper et al. 2018]. |
Comment | Wells and Wellington (1985) diagnose Proablepharus barklyensis by referencing Plate 718 in Cogger (1983). This plate shows a specimen with a free interparietal. Type species: Ablepharus kinghorni COPLAND 1947: 282 is the type species of the genus Austroablepharus COUPER et al. 2018. |
Etymology | The species was named after James Roy Kinghorn (1891-1983), Australian herpetologist. For further biographical information see Williams et al. (2006). The genus was named after “Austro” for Australia and ablepharus referring to an immovable lower eyelid that is partially fused to the upper eyelid to form a permanent spectacle. |
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