Delma concinna (KLUGE, 1974)
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Higher Taxa | Pygopodidae, Gekkota, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | Delma concinna concinna (KLUGE 1974) Delma concinna major (STORR 1987) |
Common Names | E: Javelin Lizard |
Synonym | Aclys concinna KLUGE 1974: 46 Aclys concinna — COGGER 2000: 278 Delma concinna — JENNINGS et al. 2003 Delma concinna — WILSON & SWAN 2010 Delma concinna major (STORR 1987) Aclys concinna major STORR 1987: 354 Delma concinna major — COGGER 2014 |
Distribution | Australia (coastal SW Western Australia) concinna: lower west coast of Western Australia; Type locality: Sorrento, 11 mi NW of Perth, W. A. major: Shark Bay region; Type locality: 2 km N Tamala, WA, in 26°40'S, 113°43'E. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | holotype: WAM R17312 Holotype: WAM R66192 [major] |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (Aclys): “Only three of the thirteen phenetic external diagnostic characters (Kluge, 1974) are shared by Aclys and Delma: large external auditory meatus (primitive, and therefore unsuitable for inferring relationships), smooth scales (shared with most other pygopodid genera) and preanal pores absent (shared with Aprasia, Ophidiocephalus and Pletholax). Aclys has two uniquely derived external character states among the Pygopodidae: upper temporal scales greatly enlarged, forming a second pair of parietals' and rostral separating rostral supranasals on dorsal midline. There is little evidence for a sister group relationship between Aclys and Delma, and pending a more adequate diagnosis for Delma, the two genera [were] considered distinct.” (Shea 1987) Additional details (473 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Limb morphology: Limbless. Type species: Aclys concinna KLUGE 1974 is the type species of the genus Aclys KLUGE 1974, which was synonymized with Delma by Kluge 1976. Subsequent authors have accepted or rejected the validity of Aclys (see Jennings et al. 2003). |
Etymology | The epithet concinna means skillfully joined, neatly arranged. The genus Aclys was named after the Latin word “aclys” for “short javelin”. |
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