Tarentola boavistensis JOGER, 1993
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Higher Taxa | Phyllodactylidae, Gekkota, Sauria, Squamata (lizards: geckos) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | |
Synonym | Tarentola rudis boavistensis JOGER 1993 Tarentola borneensis maioensis — JOGER 1984 (part.) Tarentola rudis maioensis — SCHLEICH 1987 Tarentola rudis boavistensis JOGER 1993 Tarentola maioensis — LÓPEZ-JURADO et al. 1999 (part.) Tarentola maioensis boavistensis — LÓPEZ-JURADO et al. 2005 Tarentola (Makariogecko) rudis boavistensis — CARRANZA et al. 2000 Tarentola boavistensis — VASCONCELOS et al. 2012: 338 |
Distribution | Boa Vista, Sal Rei (Cape Verde Islands) Type locality: Boavista, Ilhéu Sal Rei, southern part |
Reproduction | oviparous (manual and phylogenetic imputation, fide Zimin et al. 2022) |
Types | Holotype: RMNH 24144, paratypes: RMNH RENA |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (boavistensis): Medium to large-sized gecko (maximum SVL 79.0 mm, 65.2 mm on average; cf. Appendix 2); eye/ear opening ratio averages 1.59; ear–eye/eye– snout distance ratio averages 0.83. Eight to 11 supralabials; seven to nine infralabials; nine to ten enlarged lamellae under the 4th finger; 112–143 midbody scales (Joger, 1993); narrow central keeled dorsal tubercles (Fig. 5A1) with 20–24 midbody longitudinal lines and 14–18 transverse rows; prominent tubercle above and anterior to the ear opening. Light orangey or yellowish to pinkish grey dorsal coloration slightly translucent with reduced pattern in adults (Figs 6A1, 7A1) and whitish below. A light vertebral stripe, interrupted or complete, appears on most individuals. Eye iris generally orange to orangey brown, contrasting with the rest of the head coloration. Juveniles with black tails with strongly marked white stripes. Most specimens with thin brown streaks arranged in different angles in front of and behind the ear. First supra- and infralabials white followed by labials with very dark spots. It differs from other taxa from clade A by presenting keeled dorsal tubercles and having an orangey, yellowish to pinkish grey dorsal coloration that is slightly translucent, and an orangey eye iris. It differs from T. caboverdiana, clade B, and clade C by having a light, reduced dorsal pattern. It differs from T. gigas by having smaller SVL and from T. ‘rudis’ from Santiago, Fogo, Brava, Rombos, and Maio (taxa from clade D), by having a lower midbody scale count (112–143) but a higher number of interorbital scales (19–22) (Joger, 1993). |
Comment | MORPHOBANK M42539–M42659 (boavistensis) |
Etymology | named after the type locality. |
References |
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