Tympanocryptis centralis STERNFELD, 1925
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Higher Taxa | Agamidae (Amphibolurinae), Sauria, Iguania, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Central Pebble Dragon, Central Australian Earless Dragon |
Synonym | Tympanocryptis lineata centralis STERNFELD 1925: 234 Tympanocryptis lineata centralis — LOVERIDGE 1934: 326 Tympanocryptis lineata centralis — MITCHELL 1948: 80 Tympanocryptis lineata centralis — STORR 1964: 45 Tympanocryptis lineata centralis — WERMUTH 1967: 99 Tympanocryptis centralis — MELVILLE et al. 2007 Tympanocryptis centralis — MELVILLE et al. 2019: 27 Tympanocryptis centralis — CHAPPLE et al. 2019: 90 |
Distribution | Australia (desert regions of E Western Australia, N South Australia, C Northern Territory) Type locality: Misisonsstation Hermannsburg, oberer Finke-Fluss, Nord-Territorium. |
Reproduction | oviparous (not imputed, fide Zimin et al. 2022) |
Types | Lectotype: SMF 10349, from Hermannsburg Mission, upper Finke River, N. T., designated by MERTENS 1967 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: A species of Tympanocryptis with rostral scale separated from the canthus rostralis, nasal scale extending dorsally across the canthus and bordered below by enlarged scales, no lateral neck fold, dorsal head scales keeled, enlarged dorsal spinous scales roughly aligned longitudinally, ventral and throat scales keeled, colour pattern geographically variable, from strongly five-lined and weakly dimorphic in the south to more weakly patterned and with stronger sexual dimorphism in the north, ventral surface white with weak throat speckling [Melville et al. 2019: 27]. Additional details (708 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Habitat. Occurs on arid stone deserts, stony slopes skirting rocky hills or loams with scattered stones and spinifex grass (Triodia spp.) associated with desert ranges (Melville et al. 2019: 28). Distribution: see map in Melville et al. 2019: 6 (Fig. 1). Records from NSW are now considered tetraporophora. |
Etymology | Presumably named after the Latin centralis (central) in reference to the central Australian distribution. (G. Shea, pers. comm., 9 Feb 2024) |
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