A morphological and molecular revision of lizards of the genus Marisora Hedges & Conn (Squamata: Mabuyidae) from Central America and Mexico, with descriptions of four new species
Author
Mccranie, James R.
0000-0002-0161-478X
10770 SW 164 Street, Miami, FL 33157, USA
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0161-478X
jmccrani@bellsouth.net
Author
Matthews, Amy J.
0000-0002-2525-5072
Center for Biodiversity, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2525-5072
ajm454@rwjms.rutgers.edu
Author
Hedges, S. Blair
0000-0002-0652-2411
Center for Biodiversity, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0652-2411
sbh@temple.edu
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-04-14
4763
3
301
353
journal article
22911
10.11646/zootaxa.4763.3.1
89d5cc69-ce22-4b62-9e3d-0b791edc81d8
1175-5334
3762687
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:329421A5-F995-4603-A477-40B9D1219B09
Marisora alliacea
(Cope)
Middle American Four-lined Skink
Fig. 10A, B, C
Mabuia alliacea
Cope 1875:115
(no
holotype
designated, but
Dunn 1936:539
and
Cochran 1961:125
b listed USNM 30619–20 as
syntypes
; no type locality given, but
Taylor 1956:298
gave “
Costa Rica
” “low country” [= Caribbean lowlands] as the type locality).
Marisora alliacea
:
Hedges & Conn 2012:119
;
Sunyer
et al.
2015:384
; HerpetoNica 2015:220;
Sunyer
et al.
2016:1052
.
Mabuya unimarginata
complex:
Pinto-Sánchez
et al.
2015:195
(in part).
Diagnosis.
Marisora alliacea
is a long-limbed, relatively large species of the genus characterized (data from five males and nine females [marked by an * in Appendix 1], plus data from
Taylor 1956
, where noted) by (1) maximum known SVL in males 79.0 mm; (2) maximum known SVL in females
90.3 mm
; (3) SW 2.6–4.7% SVL in males, 2.4–5.1% in females; (4) HL 17.7–22.8% SVL in males, 16.0–22.8% in females; (5) HW 11.3–19.2% SVL in males, 11.3–17.3% in females; (6) EAL 1.1–2.0% SVL in males, 1.0–2.4% in females; (7) Toe IV length 11.4–13.3% SVL in males, 9.5–12.6% in females; (8) prefrontals one per side; (9) supraoculars four per side; (10) supraciliaries 4 per side; (11) frontoparietals one per side; (12) usually sixth supralabial below orbit (73.8%), fifth below orbit in 26.2% (includes our data and that from Taylor); (13) nuchal rows one per side; (14) dorsals 51–60 (53.6 ± 1.4) in males, 50–60 (56.0 ± 2.5) in females (includes our data and that from Taylor); (15) ventrals 59–62 (60.6 ± 1.3) in males, 56–65 (58.5 ± 3.3) in females; (16) dorsals + ventrals 112–115 (113.6 ± 1.1) in males, 107–123 (114.0 ± 4.6) in females; (17) scales around midbody
28 in
48.5%,
26 in
40.0%, rarely 27 or 29 (includes data from Taylor); (18) Finger IV lamellae 12–15 (13.4 ± 1.1) per side in males, 13–15 (13.4 ± 0.7) in females; (19) Toe IV lamellae 15–18 (16.6 ± 1.1) per side in males, 15–18 (15.6 ± 1.3) in females; (20) Finger IV + Toe IV lamellae 28–31 (30.0 ± 1.2) per side in males, 28–31 (29.0 ± 1.4) in females; (21) supranasals only occasionally (17.0%) in medial contact, thus frontonasal-rostral contact in 83.0% (includes our data and that from Taylor); (22) prefrontals not in contact medially; (23) supraocular 1-frontal contact absent; (24) parietals in contact posterior to interparietal; (25) pale middorsal stripe absent; (26) distinct dark brown to black dorsolateral stripe or lines present above a pale brown to cream dorsolateral stripe; supplemental thin dorsal stripes or lines present, those supplemental lines sometimes broken into dashes; (27) dark brown lateral stripe present, broad (3–4 scale rows high), at least in shoulder region; (28) distinct white lateral stripe present; (29) palms and soles dark brown to black; (30) total lamellae for five fingers 46–51 (47.8 ± 2.2) in males, 42–53 (47.6 ± 4.2) in females; (31) total lamellae for five toes 53–62 (56.3 ± 4.4) in males, 52–55 (53.6 ± 1.1) in females. In addition, this is a long-limbed species with the combined FLL + HLL/SVL 62.5–74.6% in males, 58.0–67.6% in females (includes data from Taylor), and 2 chinshields contacting infralabials in 84.4% and one in 15.6% (
Table 3
).
Marisora alliacea
is a member of the
M. alliacea
Group of Middle American mabuyids and is apparently most closely related to
M. roatanae
(
Fig. 3
) [but tissues not available for the also Caribbean lowland
M. magnacornae
].
Marisora alliacea
differs from
M. roatanae
in having longer limbs (FLL + HLL/SVL 62.5–74.6% in males and 58.0–67.6% in females versus 53.5–58.4% and 47.8–57.7%, respectively, in
M. roatanae
), having 26–28 scales around midbody in 88.5 % (versus
30–32 in
76.7% in
M. roatanae
), and having the frontonasal contacting the rostral in 83.0% (versus that contact absent in
M. roatanae
).
Marisora alliacea
differs from
M. magnacornae
by the combination of having the sixth supralabial below the orbit in 73.8% (versus fifth supralabial below orbit in 85.5% of
M. magnacornae
), having the frontonasal contacting the rostral in 83.0% (versus frontonasal separated from rostral in 96.9% of
M. magnacornae
), and having
28 in
48.5%,
26 in
40.0%, or rarely 27 or 29 scales around midbody (versus 30 scales around midbody in 93.1% and
28 in
6.9% of
M. magnacornae
).
Marisora alliacea
differs from all remaining Middle American
Marisora
species of the
M. alliacea
group studied herein by having long limbs (FLL + HLL/SVL 62.5–74.6% in males and 58.0–67.6% in females versus <60% in males and <58% in females of those species).
Marisora alliacea
differs from the extralimital
M. pergravis
in having dark dorsolateral stripes (versus those stripes absent in
M. pergravis
).
Marisora alliacea
has been confused with
M. unimarginata
of the
M. unimarginata
Group of the genus in several poorly documented, incomplete studies.
Marisora alliacea
differs from
M. unimarginata
in having the frontonasal contacting the rostral in 83.0% (versus frontonasal separated from rostral by supranasal medial contact in all
M. unimarginata
examined), having two chinshields per side contacting infralabials in 84.7% (versus one chinshield per side contacting infralabials in 82.9% in
M. unimarginata
), and in having dark brown dorsal stripes or lines, or dashes suggesting lines (versus dark brown to black dorsal spots present in
M. unimarginata
).
Marisora alliacea
is known to differ from the extralimital and poorly known
M. berengerae
(incomplete morphological data available only from the unsexed
holotype
) of the
M. unimarginata
group only from genetic data; furthermore a large geographical hiatus occurs between those two species.
Distribution.
Marisora alliacea
is a Caribbean versant lowland species that is known to occur from southeastern
Nicaragua
to
Bocas del Toro Province
in northwestern
Panama
(
Fig. 6
). All specimens of this species we examined are from below
300 m
elevation. The specimens examined by
Taylor (1956)
also are from localities below
300 m
elevation.
Savage (2002)
plotted numerous Costa Rican Caribbean versant localities that are certainly from higher elevations but did not provide supporting locality data or museum specimen numbers for those localities.
Remarks
. Our genetic results (
Fig. 3
) support the morphological studies of
Taylor (1956)
,
Hedges & Conn (2012)
, and this study that
Marisora alliacea
is a valid species.
Pinto-Sánchez
et al.
(2015)
also recovered
M. alliacea
as a separate clade in their phylogenetic analysis, but, oddly, did not recognize that species or comment on that result.
A tissue sample from northeastern
Costa Rica
presumed to be of this species was sequenced by
Miralles
et al.
(2009b)
and included in studies by
Miralles & Carranza (2010)
,
Hedges & Conn (2012)
,
Pinto-Sánchez
et al.
(2015)
, and in the current study. Unfortunately, the voucher specimen for that sequence apparently was not collected (
Miralles & Carranza 2010:861
). A second
Marisora alliacea
sequenced for this study from southeastern
Nicaragua
does have a voucher (MVZ 269259) that upon examination proved to be typical in morphological characters with
M. alliacea
.
The reproductive data presented by
Goldberg (2009
; as
Mabuya unimarginata
) are not informative at the species level because the summary data provided therein are a complex of
Marisora alliacea
,
M. brachypoda
, and
M. unimarginata
.
Images of
Marisora alliacea
are in HerpetoNica (2015),
Köhler (2003
,
2008
; both as
M. unimarginata
from Bartola),
Sunyer
et al.
(2016)
,
Taylor (1956)
, and
Vences
et al.
(1998
; as
M. unimarginata
).
Fitch (1985)
reported three
M. alliacea
from
Costa Rica
gave birth to 2, 2, 1 young (no dates given), but Fitch (1975) reported that one of those females was found in March.