A multivariate analysis of the fringe-toed lizards of the Acanthodactylus scutellatus group (Squamata: Lacertidae): systematic and biogeographical implications
Author
Crochet, Pierre-André
Author
Geniez, Philippe
Author
Ineich, Ivan
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2003
2003-01-31
137
1
117
155
https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1046/j.1096-3642.2003.00044.x
journal article
4378
10.1046/j.1096-3642.2003.00044.x
8ef22762-4fd3-4d65-8d0b-20b07d88d5d1
0024-4082
5437155
ACANTHODACTYLUS LONGIPES
BOULENGER, 1918
Acanthodactylus scutellatus
var.
longipes
Boulenger, 1918: 154
. Name-bearing type: Boulenger does not refer in his original description to any specimen but he clearly used several individuals housed in the British Museum and coming from the Algerian Sahara. He latter talks about
five specimens
(
Boulenger, 1921
), which are apparently all
syntypes
. These specimens are (see also
Salvador
, 1982): BMNH
1946.8.30
-32 (Wargla), BMNH 1946.9.3.75 (between the Wed Nça and El Alia), BMNH 1946.9.3.74 (El Wed, East of Tuggurt). As the original type series might have included more specimens, including members of other species, we select as
lectotype
the specimen BMNH 1946.8.4.31 (an adult male from Wargla,
Algeria
). Type locality: restricted by
lectotype
designation to Wargla [=
Ouargla
],
Algeria
.
Junior synonym
.
Acanthodactylus longipes panousei
Bons & Girot, 1964: 327
. Name-bearing types:
two syntypes
MNHN 1963.1013-1014 (called ‘holotypes’ in
Bons & Girot, 1964
). Type locality: ‘Bord de l’Erg Chebbi au niveau de Merzouga’.
Chresonyms
.
Acanthodactylus longipes
Boulenger, 1918
:
Bons & Girot, 1964: 324
;
Salvador
, 1982: 132;
Arnold, 1983: 324
.
Distribution
(
Fig. 19
). Most of the Sahara from coastal
Mauritania
(this study; A. Foucart, pers. com.), southern
Morocco
(Tafilalet, Iriki) (
Geniez & Soto, 1994
), northern
Mali
, northern Niger, northern
Chad
, Algerian Sahara,
Tunisia
,
Libya
(
Salvador
, 1982; this study), to
Egypt
(
Baha El Din, 1994
).
Diagnosis
. Medium-sized species (reaching
61 mm
snout-vent length, mean: 52.4). The subocular in contact with three or (rarely) four supralabials in 100% of the individuals (
Table 3
) distinguishes
Acanthodactylus longipes
from
A. aureus
and
A. taghitensis
. Dorsal scales small, very numerous (range: 55–77, mean: 66.4;
Table 2
), elongate, smooth except in the vertebral area where they can be weakly to moderately keeled (code 3 or less in 97% of the individuals, no individual reaching code 5;
Table 3
, see
Fig. 16d
). Two rows or more of supraciliary granules in 86% of the individuals (
Table 3
, see
Fig. 20b
). Large number of longitudinal rows of ventral plates (15 or more in 95% of the individuals, range: 13–19, mean: 16.1;
Table 2
) arranged in oblique rows. Large number of femoral pores (range 17–28, mean = 21.5;
Table 2
). Coloration distinctive: flanks have a mottled pattern which usually tends to disappear towards the vertebral area (
Fig. 20a
). Females can have small, regularly disposed spots. Red spots can occur on the dorsum. Pileus weakly vermiculated with red. The combination of dorsal pattern and scale structure gives to the skin of
A. longipes
a fragile and translucent aspect. This species is further characterized by an elongate and pointed snout compared to
A. scutellatus audouini
,
A. dumerili
and
A. senegalensis
. See
A. senegalensis
for additional differences from that species. Several scalation characters separate
A. longipes
from the broadly sympatric
A. dumerili
and
A. s. audouini
. A strongly fragmented fourth supraocular is found in 73% of the
A. longipes
individuals but in 14% of the
A. dumerili
and 37% of the
A. s. audouini
. Granules are often inserted between the parietal plates in
A. longipes
, which is exceptional in
A. s. audouini
and
A. dumerili
. The number of longitudinal rows of ventrals is often nearly diagnostic: most
A. longipes
(81% of the specimens) have 16 ventrals rows or more, which is extremely rare in
A. s. audouini
(1% of the specimens) or
A. dumerili
(less than 1% of the specimens).
Acanthodactylus longipes
is the only species to possess dorsal scales small, elongate and smooth except in the vertebral area. The dorsal scales in the vertebral area are only weekly keeled, a further distinction from most
A. s. audouini
and
A. dumerili
: 84% of the
A. longipes
individuals have CARE code 2 or (rarely) 1, whereas less than 2% of the
A. dumerili
specimens have CARE code 2 or 1. The typical dorsal pattern is also characteristic. It should be noted, however, that some
A. longipes
females present a uniformly pinkish coloration with small dark spots, making them similar to
A. dumerili
or
A. s. audouini
, although their pattern is less contrasting than in these species. In conclusion, although no single character is fully diagnostic between
A. longipes
and the sympatric species, a combination of several scalation and coloration features will enable to identify the vast majority of specimens. In ambiguous cases, the elongate and pointed shape of the snout and the structure of the dorsal scales are often useful, although occasional individuals remain impossible to identify safely. It should be stressed than other characters proposed by earlier authors (number of supralabials in contact with the subocular, length of hindlegs) proved to be useless.
Geographical variation
. The subspecies
panousei
, described from south-eastern
Morocco
, does not seem to be valid (
Salvador
, 1982; own results). In some populations from the eastern part of the species distribution, specimens tend to have more strongly carinate dorsal scales.