Disentangling the Pelomedusa complex using type specimens and historical DNA (Testudines: Pelomedusidae)
Author
Fritz, Uwe
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Dresden, A. B. Meyer Building, 01109 Dresden, Germany
uwe.fritz@senckenberg.de
Author
Petzold, Alice
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Dresden, A. B. Meyer Building, 01109 Dresden, Germany
Author
Kehlmaier, Christian
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Dresden, A. B. Meyer Building, 01109 Dresden, Germany
Author
Kindler, Carolin
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Dresden, A. B. Meyer Building, 01109 Dresden, Germany
Author
Campbell, Patrick
Department of Zoology, Darwin Centre (DC 1), Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, South Kensington, London SW 7 5 BD, England
Author
Hofmeyr, Margaretha D.
Chelonian Biodiversity and Conservation, Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, University of the Western Cape, Private Bag X 17, Bellville 7535, South Africa
Author
Branch, William R.
Department of Herpetology, Port Elizabeth Museum, P. O. Box 13147, Humewood 6013, South Africa & Department of Zoology, P. O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth 6031, South Africa Corresponding author. E-mail: uwe. fritz @ senckenberg. de
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-05-15
3795
5
501
522
journal article
5606
10.11646/zootaxa.3795.5.1
27b8f170-95d1-4132-a493-c0b78c109163
1175-5326
4915064
3034E613-829A-4E56-A860-CA2A7C23B8FA
Testudo subrufa
Lacepède, 1788
=
Testudo subrufa
Bonnaterre, 1789
Only when
Mertens (1937
: p. 139) and
Loveridge (1941
: p. 470) reinstated the scientific name
Pelomedusa subrufa
(
Lacepède, 1788
)
for helmeted terrapins, this name combination found wide acceptance. Previously,
Pelomedusa galeata
(
Schoepff, 1792
)
was used by most authors (see below under
Testudo galeata
Schoepff, 1792
), even though John Edward Gray in his influential works consistently applied the species name
subrufa
(as
Hydraspis subrufa
,
Gray 1831
: p. 39
or
Pelomedusa subrufa
, e.g.,
Gray 1856
: p. 53; 1863: pp. 99–100).
The name
Testudo subrufa
was originally coined by
Lacepède (1788)
in his “
Histoire Naturelle des Quadrupèdes Ovipares
”, where a specimen from the Royal Cabinet Paris was described under the name “
La Roussâtre
” (p. 173). In the “
Synopsis methodica Quadrupedum oviparorum
” of the same work, a folded table in which binominals were applied to the individual species, Lacepède named this terrapin
Testudo subrufa
. According to
Lacepède (1788
: p. 173) the terrapin on which he based his description was obtained from Pierre Sonnerat (1745–1814) and came allegedly from “
Inde
”.
This specimen, which has to be identified with the
holotype
of
Testudo subrufa
Lacepède, 1788
, is still present in the collection of the Muséum National d’Histoire naturelle (
Bour 1982
) and was examined by us; tissue for genetic examination was extracted. The type (MNHN 7970) is a shell of an adult terrapin (straight carapacial length
13.67 cm
) with most epidermal scutes missing. Its plastron is broken (
Fig. 2
).
FIGURE 2.
Dorsal and ventral view of the holotype of
Testudo subrufa
Bonnaterre, 1789
(MNHN 7970, straight carapacial length 13.67 cm). Scale bar, 3 cm. Photos: M.D. Hofmeyr.
Since the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (
ICZN 2005
: Opinion 2104, Case 3226) has ruled that
Lacepède’s (1788)
“
Histoire Naturelle des Quadrupèdes Ovipares
” is an unavailable non-binominal work,
Bonnaterre (1789)
became author of
Testudo subrufa
(and of other names) by re-publishing Lacepède’s descriptions using consistently binominal scientific names. The
type
status of the terrapin described by
Lacepède (1788)
and re-described by
Bonnaterre (1789
: p. 28) remains unaffected by this transfer of formal authorship.
It is obvious that the original type locality (“
Inde
”) of
Testudo subrufa
is in error. In accordance with the information provided by
Lacepède (1788)
,
Mertens (1937
: p. 139) and
Loveridge (1941
: p. 470) believed that the type specimen of
Testudo subrufa
originates from Sonnerat, who is known to have collected at the Cape of Good Hope. Therefore, they identified the type locality with the Cape. However, based on an extensive discussion of historical details,
Bour (1982)
concluded that the
holotype
of
Testudo subrufa
was most probably not collected by Sonnerat, but by Philibert Commerson (1727–1773), who stayed on
Madagascar
in 1770. Some drawings of Commerson’s Malagasy specimens are still present in the Central Library of the Paris Museum.
Bour (1982)
identified one of these drawings with the
holotype
and designated “Taolañaro (Fort-Dauphin), République Malagasy [
Madagascar
]” (p. 535) as type locality of
Testudo subrufa
. However, probably due to oversight,
Bour (1985
: p. 56) endorsed later the Cape of Good Hope as type locality of
Testudo subrufa
again.
All of our efforts to generate mtDNA sequences from the
holotype
resulted only in contaminant fungal sequences. Therefore, in the absence of other evidence, we accept the type locality Taolañaro (
Madagascar
), as suggested by
Bour (1982)
. Consequently, the name
Testudo subrufa
Bonnaterre, 1789
refers to lineage VIII of
Vargas-Ramírez
et al.
(2010)
, which is known to occur in
Madagascar
,
Botswana
,
the Democratic Republic of the Congo
,
Malawi
and
Namibia
(
Fig. 1
). The Malagasy populations are thought to be introduced from continental Africa (
Vargas-Ramírez
et al.
2010
;
Wong
et al.
2010
). If lineage VIII is deemed to be taxonomically distinct, the name
Pelomedusa subrufa
(
Bonnaterre, 1789
)
will have to be restricted to this taxon.