Cercosaura bassleri RUIBAL, 1952
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Higher Taxa | Gymnophthalmidae (Cercosaurinae), Sauria, Gymnophthalmoidea, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Ocellated Tegu |
Synonym | Cercosaura ocellata bassleri RUIBAL 1952: 499 Cercosaura ocellata bassleri — PETERS et al. 1970: 91 Cercosaura ocellata bassleri — AVILA-PIRES 1995: 365 Cercosaura ocellata bassleri — LEHR 2002 Cercosaura ocellata — FRANÇA & VENÂNCIO 2010: 76 Cercosaura ocellata ocellata — CUNHA 1961: 131 (part) Cercosaura ocellata baessleri — DIXON & SOINI 1975: 6 (in error) Cercosaura ocellata — DOAN 2003: 104 (part) Cercosaura ocellata — OLIVEIRA & MOURA 2013: 387 (part) Cercosaura ocellata — SALES et al., 2014: 1531 (part) Cercosaura bassleri — TORRES-CARVAJAL et al. 2015 Cercosaura ocellata bassleri — RIBEIRO-JUNIOR & AMARAL 2016 |
Distribution | Peru, Brazil (Acre, Rondônia, Amazonas fide Costa & Bérnils 2018) Type locality: Perené, Rio Perené, Peru. |
Reproduction | oviparous (not imputed, fide Zimin et al. 2022) |
Types | Holotype: AMNH 23191, adult male |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Cercosaura with maximum female SVL 64.0 mm and maximum male SVL 64.6 mm; snout round; frontonasal single; nasal and frenocular undivided; loreal divided into upper and lower scales, lower one in contact with first supralabial; four infralabials to posterior margin of eyes; four pairs of chinshields; 13–25 neck scales in a vertical row; 24–39 scales around midbody; dorsal scales hexagonal, keeled and organized in longitudinal rows, twice as long as scales on flanks, 31–37 along a middorsal line, from occipitals to anterior margin of hind limbs; six longitudinal rows of ventrals; precloacal plate usually with two anterior and two posterior scales in males, two anterior and two or four posterior scales in females; 3–8 femoral pores on one side in males, 3–7 in females; 6–8 lamellae under finger I; head, throat and body ventrally predominantly white or cream (in adult males it may become orange), usually with black blotches (from Sturaro et al. 2018). |
Comment | The only character that seems to devide ocellata and bassleri is an undivided (ocellata) or divided (bassleri) loreal scale, although other distinguishing (but more variable) characters exist. Distribution: TORRES-CARVAJAL et al. 2015 almost exclusively used samples from Ecuador for their phylogenetic analysis while Cercosaura ocellata and its subspecies occur over a larger area in South America (mostly Brazil). |
Etymology | Named in honor of Dr. Harvey Bassler, “who made extensive herpetological collections in Peru”. |
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