Hemiphyllodactylus indosobrinus ELIADES, PHIMMACHAK, SIVONGXAY, SILER & STUART, 2019
We have no photos, try to find some by Google images search:
Higher Taxa | Gekkonidae, Gekkota, Sauria, Squamata (lizards: geckos) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | |
Synonym | Hemiphyllodactylus indosobrinus ELIADES, PHIMMACHAK, SIVONGXAY, SILER & STUART 2019: 138 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 8 — GRISMER et al. 2015:863 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — GRISMER et al. 2013:852; Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — GRISMER et al. 2014:490 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — GRISMER et al. 2014:541 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — NGUYEN et al. 2014:46 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — YAN et al. 2016:544 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — GRISMER et al. 2017:6 Hemiphyllodactylus sp. nov. 9 — SUKPRASERT et al. 2018:365 Hemiphyllodactylus cf. yunnanensis — NGUYEN et al. 2013:91 |
Distribution | Laos (Champasak Province) Type locality: Bolaven Plateau, Dong Hua Sao National Protected Area, Pakxong District, Champasak Province, Laos, 15.07694°N, 106.13750°E, WGS84 (Fig. 1A in Eliades et al. 2019), ca. 1,000 m elev |
Reproduction | oviparous (manual imputation, fide Zimin et al. 2022) |
Types | Holotype. FMNH 258695 (field number HKV 63933), adult male, collected 13 September 1999 by BLS, Harold F. Heatwole, and Bee Thaovanseng. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Hemiphyllodactylus indosobrinus sp. nov. can be distinguished from all congeners by having the following combination of characters: supralabials 15; infralabials 12; precloacofemoral pores 18 in males (females unknown); subdigital lamellae on Fingers II–V 4-5-5-4; total lamellae on hand 18; subdigital lamellae on Toes II– V 4-5-5-5; total lamellae on foot 19; dorsal scales across midbody within one orbital diameter 30; ventral scales across midbody within one orbital diameter 11; cloacal spurs two; chin scales eight; and internasal scales three. Additional details (2736 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Habitat: the holotype was collected approximately 1 m above the ground inside of a vertical palm tree in wet evergreen forest during the morning (Fig. 1B). Only known from the holotype. |
Etymology | The specific epithet is taken from the Latin indus for belonging to India, and sobrinus for maternal cousin, in reference to its close relationship, along with H. flaviventris, in maternally-inherited mitochondrial sequence data to the Indian endemic H. aurantiacus (Fig. 2; Grismer et al. 2013, 2014a,b, 2015, 2017; Nguyen et al. 2013, 2014; Ngo et al. 2014; Yan et al. 2016; Sukprasert et al. 2018). |
References |
|
External links |