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Toropuku inexpectatus HITCHMOUGH, NIELSEN & BAUER, 2020

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Higher TaxaDiplodactylidae, Gekkota, Sauria, Squamata (lizards: geckos)
Subspecies 
Common Names 
SynonymToropuku inexpectatus HITCHMOUGH, NIELSEN & BAUER 2020
Hoplodactylus stephensi — WHITAKER et al. 1999 (part)
Hoplodactylus aff. stephensi “Coromandel” — HITCHMOUGH et al. 2010 Toropuku “Coromandel” HITCHMOUGH et al. 2013 
DistributionNew Zealand (North Island, N Coromandel Peninsula)

Type locality: road through forest near Port Charles, Coromandel Peninsula, Waikato, New Zealand.  
Reproduction 
TypesHolotype. NMNZ (given as MONZ) RE.006939, adult female (Fig. 2), collected on 3 August 1999 by A. Wright.
Paratype. Adult male paratype NMNZ (= MONZ) RE.006938, (Fig. 4), collected inside a house near regenerating forest on outskirts of Coromandel township, Coromandel Peninsula, Waikato, New Zealand, on 9 March 1997 by G. Jacobsen. 
DiagnosisDiagnosis: Toropuku inexpectatus sp. nov. may be distinguished from T. stephensi by its conical rather than domed scales in the frontal region, more gracile build, longer tail (1.32 x snout-vent length versus 0.97-1.27), longer snout, broader head, and lower number of precloacal (5 versus 6–9) and femoral (2–3 versus 4–5) pore rows. It also exhibits a substantial genetic divergence (2.6% 16S, 6.6% ND2) from its insular congener. The colour pattern typically shows more prominent fine darker streaks on the dorsal surface and limbs than in T. stephensi, but pattern varies in both species. The markings on the dorsal surface of the head between and behind the eyes also differ. In T. stephensi two straight bars are separated from the mid-nasal stripe and each other (converge posteriorly but do not meet). In T. inexpectatus sp. nov. the mid-nasal stripe usually continues back past the eyes, expanding then contracting to a point (rarely with a curved, v-shaped marking largely separate from the mid-nasal stripe, but with no central space posteriorly).


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Comment 
EtymologyToropuku inexpectatus sp. nov. is named for the unexpectedness of its discovery in an area with an already well-known herpetofauna, strongly disjunct from the known range of its close sister species and in the absence of populations on nearby pest-free islands where other lizard species now extinct or rare on the mainland remain abundant. Toropuku was stated to be interpreted as masculine for the purposes of name formation (Nielsen et al. 2011); the specific epithet, being adjectival, therefore also has a masculine ending. 
References
  • Hitchmough, R. A., Hoare, J.M., Jamieson, H., Newman, D., Tocher, M.D. and Anderson, P. J. 2010. Conservation status of New Zealand reptiles, 2009. New Zealand Journal of Zoology 37 (3): 203-224 - get paper here
  • HITCHMOUGH, R. A., NIELSEN, S. V., & BAUER, A. M. 2020. Earning your stripes: a second species of striped gecko in the New Zealand gecko genus Toropuku (Gekkota: Diplodactylidae). Zootaxa 4890 (4): 578-588 - get paper here
  • Hitchmough, R., Anderson, P., Barr, B., Monks, J., Lettink, M., Reardon, J., Tocher, M. & Whitaker, T. 2013. Conservation status of New Zealand reptiles, 2012. In: New Zealand Threat Classification Series 2. Department of Conservation, Wellington, pp. 1–16
  • Whitaker, T., Hitchmough, R. & Chappell, R. 1999. A striped gecko (Hoplodactylus stephensi) at Coromandel. Conservation Advisory Science Notes. No. 232. Department of Conservation, Wellington, (2) + 17 pp
 
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