Coleonyx gypsicolus GRISMER & OTTLEY, 1988
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Higher Taxa | Eublepharidae, Gekkota, Sauria, Squamata (lizards: geckos) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: ISLA SAN MARCOS BAREFOOT BANDED GECKO S: SALAMANQUESA |
Synonym | Coleonyx switaki gypsicolus GRISMER & OTTLEY 1988 Coleonyx gypsicolus — GRISMER 1999 Coleonyx gypsicolus — SEUFER ET AL. 2005 Coleonyx gypsicolus — JONES & LOVICH 2009 |
Distribution | Mexico (Gulf of California: Isla San Marcos) Type locality: “Arroyo de la Taneria, Isla San Marcos, Baja California Sur, Mexico.” |
Reproduction | oviparous (manual imputation, fide Zimin et al. 2022) |
Types | Holotype: BYU 37643 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Coleonyx switaki gypsicolus differs from all other C. switaki in its signiicantly higher mean number of postnasals; eyelid fringe scales; scales a top of head; scales around forearm, body, foreleg, and tail; bright yellow groundcolor, break up of anterior 2-3 black caudal bands to form spots, and prominent vertebral stripe. It differs further from the San Diego and Imperial Co. populations in its significantly higher mean number of precloacal scales and tubercles at midline and larger spots on the regenerated tail. It differs further from the Tres Virgenes populations in its significantly lower mean number of postmentals, significantly higher mean number of gulars, mottled ground color, and less well-defined dorsal spots. It is differentiated further from the San Diego Co. population in its significantly higher mean number of preoculars. Additional details (688 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Grismer (1999) elevated gypsicolus to full species status based on scale counts: it has 42-48 eyelid fringe scales versus 32-40 in Coleonyx switaki switaki. Abundance: only known from its original description (Meiri et al. 2017). |
Etymology | Named after Latin gypsum, or Greek γύψος, white lime plaster, gypsum + Latin -icolus, dwelling in, inhabiting, living among. [“...the name is derived from the Latin words gypsum (= gypsum) and colus (= to dwell or live) and refers to the gypsum habitat in which this subspecies occur...”]. |
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