Kentropyx borckiana (PETERS, 1869)
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Higher Taxa | Teiidae, Teiinae, Gymnophthalmoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Guyana Whiptail, Guyana Kentropyx |
Synonym | Centropyx Borckiana PETERS 1869: 64 Centropyx Copii GARMAN 1887 Gastropholis mertensi DE GRIJS 1926 (fide GALLAGHER & DIXON 1980) Centropyx copei — BARBOUR 1930 Kentropyx copei — GRANT 1959 Kentropyx borckianus — HOOGMOED 1973 Kentropyx borckiana — SCHWARTZ & HENDERSON 1991: 421 Kentropyx borckianus — BAUER et al. 1995: 66 Kentropyx borckiana — HARVEY et al. 2012 |
Distribution | Lesser Antilles: Barbados; NE South America: N Guyana, N French Guiana, N Suriname. copei: Barbados (fide GRANT 1959) Type locality: “Guiana” |
Reproduction | oviparous. More than 100 females and yet no males of Kentropyx borckiana are known from northern South America and Barbados. K. borckiana from Guyana seems to represent a unisexual clone that originated from one or more parthenogenetic F-1 hybrids between Kentropyx calcarata x Kentropyx striata, the other two species of this genus known previously from the Guiana Region. |
Types | Lectotype: ZMB 897 (designated by HOOGMOED 1973) Holotype: USNM 12207 (holotype status not clear) [Centropyx copii] |
Diagnosis | Additional details, e.g. a detailed description or comparisons (802 characters), are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | PETERS (1869) ascribes “C. Borckiana” to Merrem 1809 who may have described the species in the “Ann. d. Wetterauischen Gesellschaft 1809”. See also Myers et al. 2011. Centropyx copii Garman, 1887 was described by Cope (1861) as an example of C. intermedius Schlegel, fide G.R. Zug, January 1969 (fide USNM catalog). Distribution: Has been erroneously reported from Trinidad (BOOS & QUESNEL 1971). |
Etymology | Named after Johann Graf von Borcke (1781-1862) who joined the Prussian Army (1797), served temporarily in the Westphalian Army in Spain and in Russia, before re-joining the Prussian army. He fought at both Ligny and Waterloo. He retired from the army (1832). Merrem reported that Major von Borcke had presented a number of specimens to the Berlin Museum and that they had come originally from the sale of Albertus Seba’s collection. Peters, who re-described the animal (1869), remarked that unfortunately the original specimen of the Borcke collection got lost. |
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