Leiocephalus raviceps COPE, 1863
Find more photos by Google images search:
Higher Taxa | Leiocephalidae, Iguania, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | Leiocephalus raviceps raviceps COPE 1863 Leiocephalus raviceps delavarai GARRIDO 1973 Leiocephalus raviceps jaumei SCHWARTZ & GARRIDO 1968 Leiocephalus raviceps klinikowskii SCHWARTZ 1960 Leiocephalus raviceps uzzelli SCHWARTZ 1960 |
Common Names | E: Pallid Curlytail, Mountain Curlytail Lizard |
Synonym | Liocephalus raviceps COPE 1863: 183 Leiocephalus raviceps — BARBOUR 1919: 10 Leiocephalus raviceps — SCHWARTZ & HENDERSON 1991: 446 Leiocephalus raviceps — RODRÍGUEZ SCHETTINO 1999: 130 Leiocephalus raviceps delavarai GARRIDO 1973 Leiocephalus raviceps delavarai — HEDGES et al. 2019 Leiocephalus raviceps jaumei SCHWARTZ & GARRIDO 1968 Leiocephalus raviceps jaumei — HEDGES et al. 2019 Leiocephalus raviceps klinikowskii SCHWARTZ 1960: 77 Leiocephalus raviceps klinikowskii — HEDGES et al. 2019 Leiocephalus raviceps uzzelli SCHWARTZ 1960: 70 Leiocephalus raviceps uzzelli — HEDGES et al. 2019 |
Distribution | E Cuba with disjunct populations in Matanzas and Pinar Delaware Rio Provinces. raviceps: Cuba (southeastern coast from Bahia de Guantánamo to north of Cajobabo and north to Jamaica). Type locality: Eastern Cuba; restricted by Gundlach, 1880, to mountains near Guantánamo, Guantánamo Province, Cuba. delavarai: central Holguin Province. Type locality: “arenal Los Cocos, a seis km de Gibara” jaumei: SW Pinar del Rio Province. klinikowskii: N Matanzas Province. uzzelli: SE coast from Bahia de Guantánamo to La Socapa. INCERTAE SEDIS: Specimens from Baracoa and Cayo Lanzanillo northeast of Isabela de Sagua have not been assigned to subspecies. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Syntypes: ANSP 8601-03, MCZ 10928, USNM 4162. Holotype: CZACC = IZ 2774 [delavarai] Holotype: CZACC = IZ 349 [jaumei] Holotype: AMNH 83326 [klinikowskii] Holotype: AMNH 79321 [uzzelli] |
Diagnosis | Additional details, e.g. a detailed description or comparisons (2861 characters), are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Illustrations: Barbour and Ramsden, 1919; Schwartz, 1960. |
Etymology | Apparently named after Latin ravus = gray, and -ceps = head, even though the head doesn’t really look gray, but the neck sometimes does. |
References |
|
External links |