Taxonomic revision of the stone geckos (Squamata: Diplodactylidae: Diplodactylus) of southern Australia
Author
Hutchinson, Mark N.
Author
Doughty, Paul
Author
Oliver, Paul M.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2167
25
46
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.189132
86143b99-7b3c-492d-9494-d645fc9c647b
1175-5326
189132
Diplodactylus granariensis rex
Storr, 1988
Giant Stone Gecko
Figs 8
,
9
,
14
D
Diplodactylus granariensis rex
Storr, 1988
: 220
.
Holotype
WAM R
97288
, 44 km southeast of Leinster, WA.
Diagnosis.
A large-bodied, shorter-tailed member of the
D. vittatus
complex, usually lacking a rostral crease. Colour pattern includes a strongly-developed, wavy-edged to almost straight dorsal stripe, extending on to the head as a very broad bifurcate pale stripe to each eye. Upper flanks lighter and bordered below by a dark midlateral stripe.
FIGURE 8.
Holotype of
Diplodactylus granariensis rex
, WAM R97288.
FIGURE 9.
Variation in colour pattern in
Diplodactylus granariensis rex
Description
(
Fig 8
,
9
,
12
D). SVL 49.0–72.0 mm (mean 60.9, n=27); tailL 24.0–42.0 mm, mean 34.5, (45.2–63.3 % SVL, mean 59.8) (n=20). Supralabials 10–13 (mean 11.7, n=27), relative height of first and second supralabial generally subequal. Infralabials 10–13 (mean 11.3, n=27). Apex of rostral scale usually lacking a median division (small division evident in 4 of 27 examined). Supranasals usually in contact; a single internarial present in 3 of 27 examined. 1–4 postnasals (mean 3.1, n=27).
Dorsal colour light to medium dark brown, greyish-brown or tan. Beige vertebral stripe continuous, with margins that vary from straight to scalloped. Vertebral stripe bifurcates on the nape to form two very wide stripes ending at the eyes. Inner margins of these stripes define a relatively small inverted triangle of the dorsal body colour confined to the parietal region. Blackish paravertebral margins of vertebral stripe strongly developed, tending to merge gradually with the colouring of the upper lateral zone, but sometimes forming a broad blackish dorsolateral stripe, well demarcated from both the vertebral and lateral colours. Upper lateral zone usually with a wavy dark stripe margined by paler colouring. At most, lateral patterning consists only of scattered small lighter spots that lack obvious dark margins.
Karyotype.
Unknown.
Distribution.
Arid interior of Western
Australia
, beyond the mulga-eucalypt line and south of the Gibson Desert, from the Ophthalmia Range near Newman, southeast to near Leonora and southwest to Paynes Find (
Figs 1
,
15
).
Similar species.
Distinguished from
D. g. granariensis
and all other
Diplodactylus
by presence of a dark lateral stripe, lack of a rostral crease and larger body size.
Remarks.
Storr (1988)
believed the two subspecies of
D. granariensis
to have allopatric distributions (see also
Storr
et al.
1990
, p. 26), and this is still the case although the apparent gap has been narrowed by subsequent collections. Recent mtDNA and allozyme studies (
Oliver
et al.
2007a
; Doughty
et al.
2008) have shown that there are very few molecular differences between the two taxa, with
D. g. granariensis
being paraphyletic, the populations of
D. g. rex
forming a monophyletic crown group most closely related to northern populations of
D. g. granariensis
. Yet,
D. g. rex
is the most distinctive taxon morphologically within the species complex. We regard the status of
rex
as not yet firmly established, and so for this paper continue to recognize
rex
as a subspecies of
D. granariensis
.
Continued use of subspecies helps to emphasise the very close genetic similarity between
rex
and geographically proximate populations of typical
granariensis
, in spite of obvious morphological differences. Detailed sampling in the region of overlap (running from about Mt Magnet to Leonora) would provide the specimens needed to establish whether there is gene flow between the taxa.