Monopeltis infuscata BROADLEY, 1997
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Higher Taxa | Amphisbaenidae, Amphisbaenia, Lacertoidea, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Dusky Spade-snouted Worm Lizard, Infuscate wedge-snouted amphisbaenian |
Synonym | Monopeltis infuscata BROADLEY 1997 Monopeltis capensis (not A. SMITH) — PETERS 1867: 235 (part.) Monopeltis sphenorhynchus — PETERS 1879: 275 (part.) Monopeltis capensis capensis — LOVERIDGE 1941: 423 (part.) Monopeltis infuscata — GANS 2005: 36 Monopeltis infuscata — BATES et al. 2014: 153 |
Distribution | SW Angola, south through Namibia to the Republic of South Africa (N Cape Province) and west into SW Botswana and Zimbabwe. Type locality: Nottingham Estates, Beitbridge, Zimbabwe. |
Reproduction | |
Types | Holotype: NMZB 6072 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: A plesiomorphic sibling species of M. capensis, from which it is distinguished by its extensive dark dorsal pigmentation and the presence of a transverse division of the large dorsal head shield in juveniles, which persists as a pair of blind lateral clefts in nearly half of the adult specimens. There are usually four postgenials in the first row rather than two or three as in M. capensis. (Broadley 1997). Additional details (3629 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | A plesiomorphic sibling species of Monopeltis capensis-complex. Sympatric with M. sphenorhynchus in Zimbabwe, with M. anchietae in Angola and Namibia, with M. leonardi in Namibia, with M. s. mauricei and Dalophia pistillum in Botswana and with M. capensis at Gabane (Botswana). Sympatry. M. infuscata is sympatric with M. s. sphenorhynchus at the type locality (Broadley 1988a). It is sympatric with M. anchietae at Humbe in Angola and Windhoek in Namibia, while it is sympatric with both M. anchietae and M. leonhardi at Okahandja, Otjarondyupa, Osongombe and on the Waterberg. In Botswana, M. infuscata is sympatric with M. anchietae 40 km west of Ghanzi, with M. s. mauricei and Dalophia pistillum at Mabuasehube Pan and with M. capensis at Gabane (Broadley 1997). |
Etymology | The name (L. in = in, fuscus = brown) refers to the patchy grey-brown dorsal pigmentation, which is more extensive than in any other member of the M. capensis complex. |
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