Plestiodon indubitus (TAYLOR, 1933)
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Higher Taxa | Scincidae, Scincinae, Scincoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Mexican Short-nosed Skink S: Aspia |
Synonym | Eumeces indubitus TAYLOR 1933 Eumeces indubitus — TAYLOR 1936: 466 Eumeces indubitus — TAYLOR 1943: 277 Eumeces brevirostris indubitus — DIXON 1969 Eumeces brevirostris indubitus — MEDICA et al. 1975 Eumeces brevirostris indubitus — CASTRO-FRANCO & BUSTOS-ZAGAL 2003 Plestiodon brevirostris indubitus — LINER 2007 Plestiodon indubitus — FERIA-ORTIZ et al. 2011 Plestiodon indubitus — BRANDLEY et al. 2012 |
Distribution | Mexico (Guerrero, Morelos, Michoacán, Jalisco) Type locality: about 40 miles (63 km) SE Mexico City (Mexico-Cuernavaca highway), near Cuernavaca, Morelos. |
Reproduction | oviparous. |
Types | Holotype: FMNH 100084, (as E.H. Taylor/H.M. Smith collection 1731), Mexico-Cuernavaca highway, about 40 miles SE Mexico City (kilometer 63), collected E.H. Taylor & H. Smith, 9.vi.1932 |
Diagnosis | |
Comment | Subspecies after LINER 1994. Subspecies: FERIA-ORTIZ et al. 2011 provide evidence that P. b. brevirostris, P. b. bilineatus, P. b. dicei, and the eastern populations of P. b indubitus (from Morelos, Guerrero, and México) represent distinct species, whereas the western populations of P. b. indubitus (from Colima and Jalisco) represent an undescribed species. The data cannot resolve whether P. b. pineus is conspecific with P. b. dicei or P. b. dicei is a paraphyletic ( = nonexclusive) species relative to an exclusive P. b. pineus. Thus, the status of P. b. pineus remains uncertain. The haplotype phylogeny also suggests that P. b. brevirostris may represent more than one species. BRANDLEY et al. (2012) showed that bilineatus, dicei, and indubitus are paraphyletic with respect to other species and thus need to be split up. |
Etymology | Named after Latin “brevis, -e” = short and “rostrum” = beak, proboscis, trunk. |
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