Catalogue of distribution of lizards (Reptilia: Squamata) from the Brazilian Amazonia. IV. Alopoglossidae, Gymnophthalmidae
Author
Ribeiro-Júnior, Marco A.
Author
Amaral, Silvana
text
Zootaxa
2017
4269
2
151
196
journal article
33001
10.11646/zootaxa.4269.2.1
24db334d-8e18-4158-a02b-84e08c9fefd3
1175-5326
581975
DDD8F72E-C27A-4B0F-82EA-17B01B93ED9C
Potamites ecpleopus
(Cope, 1876)
Type-locality.
Middle and
upper Amazon
, in
Brazil
and
Peru
, restricted by Uzzell (1966) to
Río Huallaga
, somewhere between
Rioja
,
Moyobamba
and
Balsaspuerto.
Pertinent taxonomic references.
Cope (1876), Boulenger (1885), Sinitsin (1930), Burt & Burt (1931), Shreve (1935),
Cunha
(1961), Uzzell (1966), Peters & Donoso-Barros (1970), Sherbrooke & Cole (1972), Duellman (1978),
Cunha
et al.
(1985), Ávila-Pires (1995), Vanzolini (1995), Ávila-Pires & Vitt (1998), Pellegrino
et al.
(2001), Bell
et al.
(2003), Castoe
et al.
(2004), Doan & Castoe (2005), Chávez & Vásquez (2012), Goicoechea
et al
. (2016).
Distribution and habitat.
Potamites ecpleopus
is endemic to
Amazonia
, with an apparently disjunct distribution in western (delimited eastward by the Japurá, Purus, and
Beni
Rivers) and eastern
Amazonia
(restricted to the
Tocantins
–Xingu and Xingu–Tapajós interfluviums, south of the Amazon) (
Fig. 15
). MZUSP 64623, however, comes from the upper Comemoração River, a second order tributary of the Madeira River, an intermediary location between the western and eastern areas of occurrence.
Potamites ecpleopus
occurs in
Brazil
,
Colombia
,
Ecuador
,
Peru
, and
Bolivia
(
Fig. 15
). In
Brazil
, it is known from the states of
Pará
,
Amazonas
,
Acre
,
Rondônia
, and
Mato Grosso
.
Potamites ecpleopus
is semiaquatic and diurnal, inhabits primary and disturbed terra firme forests, where it is found close to streams (with sandy, rocky or muddy bottoms), in swampy areas, on the leaf litter or directly on rocks or mud (occasionally on trunks, branches or limbs); active specimens are either at the margin of, or partially submerged in the water, and they may also be found under logs and in holes between rocks at the edge of water (Sherbrooke 1975; Duellman 1978;
Cunha
et al.
1985; Dixon & Soini 1986; Ávila-Pires 1995; Vitt & Zani 1996; Vitt & Ávila-Pires 1998; Vitt
et al.
1998b; 1999; Schlüter
et al.
2004; Whitworth & Beirne 2011).