Calorodius thorntonensis (GREER, 1983)
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Higher Taxa | Scincidae, Sphenomorphinae (Sphenomorphini), Scincoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Thornton Peak Calyptotis, Thornton Peak Skink |
Synonym | Calyptotis thorntonensis GREER 1983: 47 Calyptotis thorntonensis — COGGER 2000: 389 Calyptotis thorntonensis — WILSON & SWAN 2010 Calorodius thorntonensis — TORKKOLA et al. 2022 |
Distribution | Australia (Queensland) Type locality: southern base of Thornton Peak, Qld., 16° 11' S, 145°24' E. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: QM J28354 (previously AMS R56574) |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (genus). A genus of Australian Sphenomorphini displaying the following combination of derived character states: head tapers to a point in profile, the frontals and nasals lying in the same plane which is angled down from the frontoparietal suture to the premaxilla; limbs short, hind limb length no more than 27% of SVL, toes short, with loss of two phalanges from the fourth finger of the manus (2.3.4.3.3) and one from the fourth toe of the pes (2.3.4.4.4); postorbital bone absent; small posteriorly-directed processes on the palatal rami of the pterygoids which are separated by deeply projecting posterior processes of the palatines; single loreal scale; lower secondary temporal scale is overlapped by the upper secondary temporal; postmental scale contacts only the first infralabial scale; midbody scale rows 22–24; external ear represented by scaly, discoidal depression (scaly, superficial tympanum). (Torkkola et al. 2022, supplementary file S7). Additional details (628 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Abundance: only known from the type locality (Meiri et al. 2017). Limb morphology: 5 digits, 5 toes (Singhal et al. 2018, Cogger 2014) Type species: Calyptotis thorntonensis GREER 1983: 47 is the type species of the genus Calorodius Torkkola et al. 2022. |
Etymology | Named after Thornton Peak, the type and, as yet, only known locality for the species. The genus was named after the Latin masculine word for heat, calor, and for disliking, odio, in reference to its occurrence in relatively cool, high elevation habitats, and apparent physiological intolerance for heat. |
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