Sceloporus marmoratus HALLOWELL, 1852
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Higher Taxa | Phrynosomatidae, Sceloporinae, Iguania, Sauria, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Rosebelly Lizard S: Panza Azul-Rosada marmoratus: Northern Rosebelly Lizard olloporus: Southern Rose-bellied Lizard |
Synonym | Sceloporus marmoratus HALLOWELL 1852: 178 Sceloporus delicatissimus HALLOWELL 1852: 178 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — SMITH 1934: 125 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — SMITH 1939: 272 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — SMITH 1946 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — SMITH & TAYLOR 1950: 131 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — WERLER & SMITH 1952 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — CONANT & COLLINS 1991: 103 Sceloporus marmoratus — MENDOZA-QUIJANO 1998 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — BARTLETT & BARTLETT 1999: 233 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — CROTHER 2000 Sceloporus variabilis marmoratus — COLLINS & TAGGART 2009 Sceloporus marmoratus — REYES et al. 2016 Sceloporus marmoratus — SOLIS-ZURITA et al. 2019 Sceloporus marmoratus — HEIMES 2022 Sceloporus marmoratus — WERLER & SMITH 1952 |
Distribution | USA (Texas), Mexico (Atlantic lowlands from San Antonio, Texas, south to S Tamaulipas, west to Coahuila, Nuevo León). Type locality: San Antonio, [Bexar Co.] Texas. |
Reproduction | oviparous. |
Types | Holotype: lost. Cope (1900) noted USNM 2892 as a "type" from San Antonio (under S. variabilis, with which he synonymized it) but it too is lost. Furthermore it is uncertain whether it was the type of delicatissimus or marmoratus, both described by Hallowell on the same page, from the same locality and taken by the same collector, Dr. S. W. Woodhouse Holotype: USNM 16020, collected by S. W. Woodhouse [delicatissimus] |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Smith 1939: 272 Additional details (42 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Synonymy: Mendoza-Quijano et al. (1998) recognized Sceloporus v. marmoratus and S. v. olloporus as a distinct species (based on molecular evidence). |
Etymology | The Greek marmaros, "marble," and Latin -atus, "pertaining to the nature of," presumably refer to the perceived marble-like appearance of the type. |
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