Oedura cincta DE VIS, 1888
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Higher Taxa | Diplodactylidae, Gekkota, Sauria, Squamata (lizards: geckos) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Inland marbled velvet gecko |
Synonym | Oedura cincta DE VIS 1888 Oedura derelicta WELLS & WELLINGTON 1985: 14 Oedura cincta — OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016 Oedura cincta — HOSKIN 2019 |
Distribution | Australia (New South Wales, S Northern Territory, S Queensland, SE South Australia) Type locality: Charleville, Queensland, Australia (lectotype locality) |
Reproduction | oviparous (not imputed, fide Zimin et al. 2022) |
Types | Lectotype: QM J226 (designated by OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016); paralectotypes. AMS R5602, AMS R5603, localities as for lectotype. Holotype: NTM R11413, from Jessie Gap, Alice Springs, Northern Territory [derelicta] |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: A large-bodied (SVL: mean 90 mm, max 108 mm) species in the O. marmorata complex, with a moderately broad head (HW/SVL 0.17–0.21), moderately long body length (Trk/SVL 0.42–0.53), moderately long tail (original TL/SVL 0.61–0.79) narrower than head and roughly circular in cross-section, rostral usually completely divided, apical lamellae wide (ToeW/SVL 0.023–0.036), subdigital lamellae in a flared series that on fingers 3 and 4 is wider than apical pair, 9–21 precloacal pores in adult males and dorsal pattern (especially conspicuous on juveniles) of 5 or 6 light transverse bands on purplish-brown background [OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016: 162]. Additional details (2050 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Synonymy: after OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016. This species has been considered as a synonym of O. marmorata but was revalidated by OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016. Oedura derelicta Wells & Wellington, 1985 was diagnosed from O. marmorata by ‘the lack of transverse banding’ in the latter species. This diagnosis was made citing photographs of Oedura ‘derelicta’ in Bustard (1970, Plate 24) and O. ‘marmorata’ in Cogger (1983, Plate 1983). In contrast to this statement, relative to other populations in the O. marmorata species complex, adult central Australian specimens often have weak or no transverse bands (Fig. 5 in OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016), and the specimen figured by Bustard appears to be a subadult. The specimen of ‘O. marmorata’ figured by Cogger (1983) from Mt Brockman in the Northern Territory represents the species described as O. gemmata by King and Gow in 1983, one of the few members of the O. marmorata species complex that lacks transverse bands at all size classes. OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016, however, consider O. derelicta as a junior synonym of O. cincta. Distribution: see map in OLIVER & DOUGHTY 2016: 153 |
Etymology | Named after the Latin verb “cingere” or “cinctum” = wearing a belt. |
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