Herpetofauna Of The Yutajé - Corocoro Massif, Venezuela: Second Report From The Robert G. Goelet American Museum-Terramar Expedition To The Northwestern Tepuis
Author
MYERS, CHARLES W.
Author
DONNELLY, MAUREEN A.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2001
2001-05-09
2001
261
1
1
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0090%282001%29261%3C0001%3AHOTYCM%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
10.1206/0003-0090(2001)261<0001:HOTYCM>2.0.CO;2
0003-0090
5378231
Adercosaurus
,
new genus
TYPE
SPECIES:
Adercosaurus vixadnexus
,
n. sp.
ETYMOLOGY: From the Greek
aderkes
(something unexpected or unseen) +
sauros
—an unexpected lizard. Gender masculine.
CONTENT: Monotypic.
Fig. 31.
Adercosaurus vixadnexus
,
new species
. Views of the holotype in life (EBRG 31263, 55 mm SVL).
DEFINITION AND DIAGNOSIS: Small lizards, maximum size probably less than
80 mm
SVL, with tail probably less than twice body length. Tongue anteriorly and posteriorly bearing oblique, anteriorly converging plicae, with intervening midsection of imbricate scalelike papillae; three pairs of nonswollen chrevronshaped infralingual plicae. Pterygoid teeth present. Phalangeal formulae 23 453 for hands, 23454 for feet. Hemipenis lacking spines or spinules, symmetrically bifurcate, with thickened, lobate apical discs; asulcate side of hemipenis with encircling nude ridges. Head scales smooth. Nasal scales separated by rostral and undivided frontonasal. Loreal separated from labials by frenocular. Supraoculars separated from eye lids by a complete superciliary series; anterior superciliary large, not expanded dorsally. Translucent palpebral disc composed of about six vertical panes. Frontoparietals medially in point contact. Interparietal longer than parietals, their common sutures forming a jagged line across rear of head. Tympanum slightly recessed, lightly pigmented. Single postmental scale followed by three pairs of genials in contact with labials. Anterior gular crease, incomplete guttural fold, and collar fold all conspicuous. Paramedian gulars enlarged, in short double row. Dorsal and lateral scales elongate with parallel sides, hexagonal, in transverse rows only; dorsals sharply keeled, strongly mucronate, laterals becoming less so. Lateral fold absent, a gra dation between lateral and ventral scales; median ventrals smooth, rectangular, gently rounded posteriorly, subimbricate, forming both transverse and longitudinal rows. Preanal scales in two rows. Femoral pores and preanal pores on same line. Limbs pentadactyl, all digits clawed; subdigital lamellae divided; base of pollex with enlarged thenar scales having produced median keels. Caudal scales similar to body scales, in uninterrupted annuli, no paramedian series of supracaudals along a vertebral suture.
Fig. 32.
Adercosaurus vixadnexus
,
new species
. Dorsal, ventral, and radiographic views of the preserved holotype (EBRG 31263), Χ1.6. Approximately the distal third of the tail is regenerated, as shown by the cartilaginous rod in the radiograph, although there is no clear external evidence of this.
In having oblique plicae on the anterior as well as the posterior part of the tongue,
Adercosaurus
seems to stand apart from all other microteiids (including
Arthrosaura
) except
Alopoglossus
,
Ecpleopus
,
Ptychoglossus
,
and
Riolama
,
but it stands with
Ecpleopus
and
Riolama
in having the lingual plicae interrupted by a midsection of scalelike papillae. Among these genera,
Adercosaurus
most closely resembles
Arthrosaura
and some
Ptychoglossus
in habitus and body scalation, but those two genera and
Alopoglossus
are distinctive in having the posterior margins of the parietals and interparietal forming a moreorless straight line across the rear of the head (interparietal posteriorly projecting, forming a jagged or irregular line in
Adercosaurus
and
Riolama
,
a gently rounded line in
Ecpleopus
).
Ecpleopus
differs from all in having hexagonal ventrals that do not form longitudinal rows, the ventrals being being arranged in transverse rows only.
The endemic tepui genus
Riolama
differs from
Adercosaurus
in lacking a claw on the first finger,
22
in
having the subdigital lamellae mostly undivided, and in having smooth lateral scales that are smaller than the keeled dorsals.
The primarily Andean genus
Anadia
also reaches the tepuis, but it differs most conspicuously from other tepui microteiids in having a tight covering of nonmucronate (and usually smooth) dorsal scales that are juxtaposed or only subimbricate, as well in having a very long tail and a relatively attenuated, flattopped snout that give it a distinctive aspect.
Anadia
evidently differs from
Adercosaurus
in hemipenial morphology (comblike rows of spinules in
Anadia
) and in the dorsal surface of the tongue (scalelike papillae anteriorly), but summary data for
Anadia
have not been published.
Anadia
,
however, has been characterized as having (in 9 species) 6–10 swollen infralingual plicae (Harris, 1985), which differs from the three thin (nonswollen) infralingual plicae in
Adercosaurus
.
See below for additional comparisons (un der Diagnosis and Remarks in species account).
DISTRIBUTION: Known only from
1700 m
on the Yutaje´–Corocoro massif.