Tympanocryptis gigas MITCHELL, 1948
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Higher Taxa | Agamidae (Amphibolurinae), Sauria, Iguania, Squamata (lizards) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Gascoyne pebble-mimic dragons |
Synonym | Tympanocryptis cephalus gigas MITCHELL 1948: 65 Tympanocryptis cephalus gigas MITCHELL 1948 Tympanocryptis cephalus gigas — WORRELL 1963: 184 Tympanocryptis cephala gigas — STORR 1964 Tympanocryptis cephalus gigas — WERMUTH 1967: 98 Rotundacryptus gigas — WELLS & WELLINGTON 1985: 19 Tympanocryptis gigas — DOUGHTY et al. 2015 Tympanocryptis gigas — CHAPPLE et al. 2019: 94 |
Distribution | Australia (Western Australia: Gascoyne region) Type locality: Ashburton and gascoyne Rivers, Western Australia. |
Reproduction | |
Types | Neotype. SAMA R68044 (male), collected from ‘between the Ashburton and Gascoyne Rivers, W.A.’; originally one of two paratypes with the number SAMA R2434, designated by Doughty et al. 2015. Holotype: SAMA R2434, missing since 1976 (Houston 1976; M. Hutchinson, pers. comm.), and is presumed lost or destroyed. Paratype. SAMA R68045 (female), details as for neotype; originally one of two paratypes with the number SAMA R2434. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Distinguished from other Tympanocryptis by the following combination of character states: presence of two pre-cloacal pores, lack of longitudinal stripes on the dorsum, presence of scattered enlarged scales with raised spines, snout convex, scales on snout rugose with at most feeble keels, rostral width ~2 times height, row of enlarged scales at anterior and dorsal edge of thigh, scales on dorsal surface of thigh heterogeneous and not aligned, ventrals smooth, and brown ground color with large dark blotches in center of dorsum and anterior to legs, tail with alternating dark and pale bands, posterior edge of dark bands with narrow black and white bands [Doughty et al. 2015] Additional details (40 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Synonymy: Tympanocryptis cephalus gigas has been synonymized with the nominate form by STORR 1982 who concluded that “These specimens do not differ substantially from those elsewhere; the attempt to divide cephala (sic) into subspecies is therefore abandoned” (p. 65). However, Doughty et al. 2015 revalidated gigas. Comparisons with other species. Tympanocryptis gigas is most likely to be confused with T. diabolicus sp. nov. and T. pseudopsephos sp. nov., as the latter species occur to the north in the Pilbara or east to the northern Goldfields regions of Western Australia. Tympanocryptis gigas is distinguished from T. diabolicus sp. nov. by possessing scattered enlarged scales on dorsum not arranged in rows (versus enlarged scales in short transverse rows), keels on dorsal surface of upper arm not aligned, ventrals smooth (versus with low keels), enlarged row of scales at front of thigh not forming a conspicuous ridge, scales on top of thigh heterogeneous and keels not aligned, and larger average body size. Tympanocryptis gigas can be distinguished from T. pseudopsephos sp. nov. by larger body size, oblong (versus rotund) body shape, convex snout (versus concave), possessing scattered enlarged scales on dorsum not arranged in rows (versus enlarged scales in short transverse rows), enlarged row of scales at front of thigh not forming a conspicuous ridge, and heterogeneous scales on upper surface of thigh [Doughty et al. 2015]. Distribution: see map in Doughty et al. 2015: 86. |
Etymology | Mitchell (1948) did not explicitly provide an etymology in his description of this taxon as a subspecies of T. cephalus. However, the word gigas is a Latinized version of the Greek gantos for ‘giant’, presumably in reference to this taxon’s relatively large body size to T. cephalus. Doughty et al. 2015 treat gigas as a noun in apposition. |
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