Dibamus floweri QUAH, ANUAR, GRISMER & GRASSBY-LEWIS, 2017
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Higher Taxa | Dibamidae, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Flower’s blind lizard |
Synonym | Dibamus floweri QUAH, ANUAR, GRISMER & GRASSBY-LEWIS 2017 Dibamus floweri — KLIUKIN et al. 2024 |
Distribution | Peninsular Malaysia (Pahang) Type locality: Fraser’s Hill, Pahang, Peninsular Malaysia at approximately 2100 hrs at (3°42′53.0″N 101°44′58.6″E), approximately 1,500 m above sea level. |
Reproduction | |
Types | Holotype: LSUHC 12481, male collected by Rupert Grassby-Lewis on 26 July 2015. Paratype. The female paratype ZRC 2.7240 was collected by Evan Quah and Alex Figueroa on 7 February 2017 along the Gap road below Fraser’s Hill at approximately 1000 hrs at (3°41.912′N, 101°43.920′E), 1,207 m above sea level. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Dibamus floweri, new species, differentiated from all other congeners by this combination of characters: maximum SVL of 112 mm; tail length 11.4–15.2% of SVL; labial, nasal sutures absent; rostral suture present but incomplete; single postocular; four scales bordering posterior edge of first infralabial; no enlarged, medial, sublabial scale; 21 midbody scale rows; 23 transverse scale rows just posterior to head; 21 transverse scale rows just anterior to vent; 175–194 ventral scales; 23–46 subcaudal scales; relative size of frontal to frontanasal 1.1–1.5; relative size of interparietal to surrounding scales 1.3–1.8; and light coloured bands on the body. These characters are scored across all nominal species of Dibamus in Table 2 (in Quah et al. 2017). Additional details (2420 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | |
Etymology | Named after Major Stanley Smyth Flower, who was one of the pioneers for herpetological discoveries in the Malay Peninsula. He made many notable discoveries over the course of his explorations in the region and his natural history observations well over a century ago were very detailed and contributed tremendously to improving our understanding of the ecology and behaviour of many species to this day. |
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