On the taxonomy of Lygosoma bampfyldei Bartlett, 1895 (Squamata: Scincidae) with descriptions of new species from Borneo and Peninsular Malaysia and the resurrection of Lygosoma schneideri Werner, 1900
Author
Grismer, L. Lee
Author
Quah, Evan S. H.
Author
Duzulkafly, Zaharil
Author
Yambun, Paul
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-06-22
4438
3
528
550
journal article
29812
10.11646/zootaxa.4438.3.6
ff3b0833-b49c-4681-9edf-566cfe3cebdb
1175-5326
1298204
595B1D22-58CF-4142-9268-9F92DD8A4FD5
Lygosoma schneideri
Werner, 1900
Sumatran Supple Skink
Figs. 4
&
5
Lygosoma bampfyldii
Boulenger, 1912
:93
;
Smith, 1930
:36
Lygosoma bampfyldei
de Rooji, 1915:263
;
Greer, 1977
:915
;
Welch
et al.,
1990
:83
;
Das & Yaakob, 2007
:78
;
Das, 2010
:238
;
Grismer, 2011
:613
.
Riopa bampfyldei
Smith 1937
:228
;
Manthey & Grossmann 1997
:275
;
Chan-ard
et al.,
1999
:27
.
Mochlus bampfyledei
Mittleman, 1952
:22
Riopa bampfyldii
Denzer & Manthey, 1991
:317
FIGURE 5.
A. Right lateral view of the heads of A, the syntype of
Lygosoma bampfyldei
(BMNH 1946.8.10.84) from the Rejan River, Sarawak, East Malaysia; B, the holotype of
L. kinabatanganensis
sp. nov.
(FMNH 76226) from the Kinabatangan District, Deramakot camp (Deramakot Sabah Forestry Department), Sabah, East Malaysia; C,
L. peninsulare
sp. nov.
(LSUHC 13857) from 13.5 km east of Jeli, Kelantan, Peninsular Malaysia; and D,
L. scheideri
(BM 4743) from Djpura, Indragiri, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photos by LLG.
Holotype
. Adult male (BM 4743) from “Indragiri, Djapura”,
Sumatra
,
Indonesia
and accessioned into the Naturhistorischen Museum Basel by
G. Schneider
on
1 January 1900
.
Diagnosis
.
Lygosoma schneideri
can be differentiated from all other
Lygosoma
by having the combination of a relatively large (SVL =
129 mm
) robust body (PEC/SVL = 0.15); seven supralabials and infralabials; midline contact of the supranasals; prefrontals not in contact; frontoparietal contacting three supraoculars; large postinterparietal present; eight superciliaries; two postsuboculars, the first being small; one or two primary and three secondary and tertiary temporals; eight nuchal scales; a deep postnasal groove extending from the nasal scale to below the anterior portion of the eye and lying below the anterior loreals and lower preocular and above the second and third supralabials; scaly lower eyelid, no window; 45 midbody scale rows; 95 paravertebral scale rows; 98 ventral scale rows; 34 caudal scale rows at the tenth subcaudal; eight large precloacal scales; smooth to weakly keeled subdigital finger lamellae, 10 lamellae on third finger; keeled subdigital toe lamellae, 16 lamellae on fourth toe; low, round, small, palmar scales numbering seven across the base of the palm; head pattern consisting of a dark, continuous frontal and occipital band separated by a yellowish band; dark occipital band not confluent with lighter color of dorsum and tail. These characters are scored across all species in the
L. bampfyldei
group in
Table 2
.
Distribution.
Lygosoma schneideri
is known only from the
type
locality.
Das (2010)
reports this species from “north-western
Sumatra
(Indrajiri,
Riau Province
)” however the
type
locality listed by
Werner (1910)
“Indragiri, Djapura” is in southeastern
Sumatra
(
Fig. 1
).
Remarks.
Boulenger (1912)
placed
Lygosoma schneideri
in the synonymy of
L. bampfyldei
in his redescription of the latter. Our analyses indicate that
L. schneideri
is considerably different from
L. bampfyldei
in having two vs. three suboculars, a postparietal scale (
Fig. 2
), 45 vs. 36–40 midbody scale rows, 95 vs. 82–85 paravertebral scale rows, 34 vs. 28–30 scale rows around the tail at the 10th subcaudal, and a significantly (
t
= -6,
p
= 0.004) more robust (PEC/SVL = 0.15) vs. a slender (PEC/SVL = 0.12–0.13) body (
Fig. 4
).