Cachryx defensor COPE, 1866
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Higher Taxa | Iguanidae, Iguania, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Yucatán Spinytail Iguana S: Garrobo de Yucatán |
Synonym | Cachryx defensor COPE 1866: 124 Cachryx defensor — BOULENGER 1885: 199 Ctenosaura erythromelas BOULENGER 1886 Cachryx defensor — COPE 1886: 270 Cachryx erythromelas — COPE 1887 Ctenosaura defensor — GÜNTHER 1890 Ctenosaura (Cachryx) annectens WERNER 1910: 25 Ctenosaura erythromelas — BAILEY 1928: 46 Ctenosaura defensor — BAILEY 1928: 48 Enyaliosaurus erythromelas — SMITH & TAYLOR 1950 Enyaliosaurus defensor — DUELLMAN 1965 Enyaliosaurus defensor — DUELLMAN 1966 Enyaliosaurus defensor — POUGH 1973 Ctenosaura defensor — LINER 1994 Ctenosaura defensor — KÖHLER 2000: 75 Ctenosaura (Enyaliosaurus) defensor — KÖHLER et al. 2000 Cachryx defensor — MALONE et al. 2017 Cachryx defensor — HEIMES 2022 |
Distribution | S Mexico (Campeche, Yucatan, Quintana Roo), Guatemala (Rio Azul) Type locality: Yucatan. Restricted to Chichén Itzá, Yucatan, Mexico by SMITH & TAYLOR 1950: 77. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Syntypes: USNM 12282 Holotype: BMNH [erythromelas] |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (genus). The following characters differentiate Cachryx, with respect to Ctenosaura: Teeth with 5 or more cusps. Modal number of premaxillary teeth, 5. Crista cranii arranged stepwise between frontal and prefrontal. Subdigital lamellae under the first phalanx of the third digit of the pes not fused. Interparietal (scale covering parietal eye) indistinct or absent. Intercalary scales absent or reduced. Conspicuously enlarged, spiniferous scales present on the anterodorsal surface of the femoral and tibial portions of the hind limbs [from Malone et al. 2017]. Additional details (123 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Type species: Cachryx defensor COPE 1866: 124 is the type species of the genus Cachryx COPE 1866. Distribution: the record(s) from Guatemala were originally thought to be C. alfredschmidti but then identified as C. defensor (Malone et al. 2017). |
Etymology | The species was apparently named after the thorny tail, most likely used as a defensive mechanism. The genus was named after Latin Cachryo, meaning catkin or parched barley, in reference to the shape of the tail. |
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