Bellatorias obiri (WELLS & WELLINGTON, 1985)
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Higher Taxa | Scincidae, Egerniinae (Tiliquini), Scincoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Arnhem Land Gorges Skink |
Synonym | Hortonia obiri WELLS & WELLINGTON 1985: 30 Egernia obiri — GREER 2005 (online) Bellatorias obiri — GARDNER et al. 2008 Egernia arnhemensis SADLIER 1990 Egernia arnhemensis — COGGER 2000: 755 Bellatorias obiri — WILSON & SWAN 2010 |
Distribution | arnhemensis: Australia (Alligator Rivers region, Northern Territory) Type locality: 3 km south west of Oenpelli, Arnhem Land, NT |
Reproduction | ovovivparous |
Types | Holotype: NTM R1190, collected by B. Jukes, 28.vii1975; paratype: NTM R0809 Paratypes: R38384 Koongarra, [Mt] Brockman Range, NT (P–J. Calaby & A. Wolfe); R100018 SE corner of Djawamba Massif, Jabiluka project area, NT (A. Kerle, 19.xi.1980). [arnhemensis] |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (Hortonia): “A genus of large rainforest inhabiting skinks, allied to Bellatorias, and easily distinguished by the following combic nation of characters: Pentadactyl limbs; body scales with low multiple keels; tail round and tapering without enlarged or expanded upper caudals; ear opening distinct with short ear lobules; head shields unfragmented, regular (with a post-narial groove); nasals separated; interparietals narrower to almost as wide as the frontal shield; parietals and frontoparietals intact; supraciliaries 8-12; subocular series continuous, all much larger than adjacent granules of lower eyelid.” (Wells & Wellington 1985) Additional details (972 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | GARDNER et al. (2008) list Bellatorias obiri as valid species although they do not appear to have included it in their sequence analysis. E. arnhemensis is a synonym of E. obiri fide GARDNER (pers. comm.). Conservation: this is one of the most-threatened reptile species in Australia (Geyle et al. 2021). Etymology: Wells & Wellington 1985 give an etymology for Hortonia (which was named after Dr. David Horton, an Australian biologist) but not for “obiri”. |
Etymology | Refers to the type locality, Obiri Rock in the Northern Territory. (G. Shea, pers. comm., 9 Feb 2024) |
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