Lizards in pinstripes: morphological and genomic evidence for two new species of scincid lizards within Ctenotus piankai Storr and C. duricola Storr (Reptilia: Scincidae) in the Australian arid zone
Author
Rabosky, Daniel L.
Author
Doughty, Paul
Author
Huang, Huateng
text
Zootaxa
2017
4303
1
1
26
journal article
32535
10.11646/zootaxa.4303.1.1
958ff34b-f5e0-4e8f-903f-2b4473bb69b3
1175-5326
840417
9E9C21C7-AB32-4A65-A2C0-1A0B826F5D64
Ctenotus piankai
Storr, 1969
: p. 106.
Coarse Sands
Ctenotus
(
Figs. 1
,
3
A, 5, 13)
Holotype
.
WAM
R30000 (field number—E.
R.P.
10799), male, collected
24 mi
[
38 km
] east-north-east of
Laverton
,
Western Australia
(
28°31'S
,
122°45'E
) by
E.R. & H.L. Pianka
on
26 February 1967
.
Measurements of
holotype
.
SVL
44 mm
; TL
99 mm
; HL
8.3 mm
; HW
5.8 mm
; HD
4.7 mm
; 4ToeL
7.3 mm
; ToeLam 24; MBSR 24; SupLab 8; InfLab 9; supraciliaries 7; EarLob 3 each side.
Paratypes
.
Listed under ‘Material’ in the original description (n = 10):
WAM
R1 5723, female,
Muggun, WA
; ‘ERP, 1’ (now
LACM
56067
),
24 mi
east-north-east of
Laverton, WA
; ‘ERP, 1’ (
LACM
56066
), sex unknown, five miles north-east of
Dunges Table, WA
; ‘ERP, 5’ (
LACM
56068–72
), sexes unknown, eight miles west of
Neale Junction
, WA
; ‘ERP, 2’ (
LACM
56064–65
), sexes unknown,
18 miles
south of
Neale Junction
, WA
.
Diagnosis.
A small-bodied (to
53 mm
SVL), elongate
Ctenotus
, nasals in contact, prefrontals in contact, 22 or 24 midbody scale rows, 18–23 compressed lamellae under toes with obtuse keel, usually eight supralabial and supraciliary scales; pattern including six (occasionally eight) pale narrow longitudinal stripes on a reddish-brown dorsum, at most a single upper mid-lateral row of spots or dashes, dorsal stripes not continuing on head to snout, tail not red or blue, pale lateral stripe approximately twice as wide as pale paravertebral and dorsolateral stripes, dark vertebral stripe terminates on nuchals (not contacting parietals), pale dorsolateral stripe not continuing anteriorly to eye (broken), pale upper lateral stripe between ear and forelimb usually continuous, lower lateral stripe (if present) on fore-body solid or broken, pale paravertebral stripes join on tail at or posterior to level of heel of extended hind limb, lower labial scales immaculate.
Description.
Head triangular, with snout narrowing to rounded tip; body long and cylindrical with flattened ventrum, neck only weakly constricted from head and body, concavity posterior to forelimbs; limbs short and welldeveloped, palmar and plantar surfaces with raised conical to triangular scales with rounded tips, pentadactyl, finger length: 3>4>2>5>1, toe length: 4>3>2>5>1, digits laterally compressed with obtuse keel, claws long and recurved; tail long and thin, tapering to a fine point.
Dorsal scales smooth, flat, reflective and imbricate, posterior edge of scale convex; scales on midline of dorsum widest, decreasing in size to ventrolateral edge; on tail, ventral scale rows along midline much wider than other scale rows, distal portion of tail often regenerated.
Nostril located in center of nasal scale, directed anteriorly, frontoparietals divided, prefrontals usually in contact, supraoculars four (2nd largest), supraciliaries 6–9, loreals two, preoculars two, presuboculars one, upper eyelid with translucent scales, lower eyelid scaly, ear opening D-shaped with 3–5 ear lobules on anterior edge, nuchals 2–8, mental with straight posterior edge, gulars imbricate decreasing in size posteriorly towards neck then increasing again on ventrum; two greatly enlarged scales anterior to cloaca. Variation in continuous and meristic characters is summarized in
Table 1
.
FIGURE 13.
Ctenotus piankai
holotype (specimen from WAM). Scale bar is 10 mm.
Coloration.
Simple pattern of light to medium reddish-brown background and six (occasionally eight) longitudinal stripes; anterior portion of dorsal scale lighter than posterior portion; vertebral stripe darker than other areas of background color; four pale dorsal stripes narrow (<½ scale width), interrupted by encroachment of dark dorsal border of scale giving a dashed appearance; two lateral stripes wider (>½ scale width) and solid, continuing forwards to ear and on to upper labials and below eye; occasionally a row of poorly-formed pale flecks or spots between pale dorsolateral and lateral lines and usually only occurring on the fore-body but may continue to near hind limbs; paravertebral stripe continues anteriorly to nuchals (rarely in contact with parietals); dorsolateral stripe continues anteriorly to fourth supraocular (sometimes to eye), but broken on parietal and temporal scales; occasional short pale lower lateral stripe below upper lateral stripe from below angle of jaw to arm; purplish-black eyes visible through medial supraocular scales; ear lobules pale; lower labials and all ventral surfaces pale and immaculate; ground color of legs, arms, and tail light reddish-brown to tan; arm with 4–6 faint alternating light and dark longitudinal stripes; leg with 6–8 contrasting light and dark stripes; on tail, pale paravertebral stripes usually join at the level of the heel of extended leg; distal portion of tail tan on dorsal surface with stripes only on lateral surfaces.
Habitat.
An inhabitant of sand dunes and plains with spinifex grasses (especially
Triodia basedowii
), with which they are closely associated (
Pianka 1986
). Dietary analysis of more than 150 individual lizards from the Great
Victoria
Desert suggests that the diet of
C. piankai
is dominated by true bugs (Hemiptera) and spiders (
Pianka 1986
;
Goodyear & Pianka 2011
).
Distribution.
Widely distributed in the western and central arid zone in
Western
Australia
, north-western
South
Australia
, the southern half of the
Northern Territory
and extending as far east as the Simpson Desert in far western
Queensland
(QM [
Queensland
Museum]
J85419
) (
Fig. 4
). In
Western
Australia
, occurs on sandy substrates as far north as the northern edge of the Tanami and Great Sandy deserts and has been found as far north as the Wolfe Creek meteor crater (UMMZ [University of
Michigan
Museum of Zoology] #242644).
Etymology.
‘Named after Dr Eric R. Pianka, in appreciation of his intensive research on the ecology of our desert lizards.’ (
Storr 1969, p. 106
).
Remarks.
This species was extensively studied in
E.R. Pianka’s
studies of the ecology of desert lizards in the Great Victoria Desert of
Western Australia
(summarized in
Pianka
1986
). The lizards collected from his studies form the majority of specimens of this species held in the
WAM
collections.