Lygodactylus depressus, Schmidt, 1919
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad123 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13302856 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B30955-FFC0-FFE4-FF71-47FBFDD3F87F |
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Lygodactylus depressus |
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LYGODACTYLUS DEPRESSUS Schmidt, 1919 View in CoL
( Figs 13–16 View Figure 13 View Figure 14 View Figure 15 View Figure 16 , Table 3 View Table 3 ; Supporting Information, Table S6)
Lygodactylus picturatus depressus View in CoL : Loveridge (1947), Wermuth (1965).
Lygodactylus depressus View in CoL : Pasteur, 1965(1964); Kluge (1991, 1993, 2001); Rösler (2000); Chirio and LeBreton (2007); Röll et al. (2010); de Lisle et al. (2013, 2016)
Lygodactylus depressus View in CoL was described from Medje, Haut-Uele Province, DRC, by Schmidt, who described the species as an intermediate form between L. picturatus View in CoL and L. gutturalis View in CoL : ‘ … The relation of this species with L. picturatus picturatus (Peters) View in CoL appears to be close; its coloration is in some respects similar but does not seem to fall within the wide variation … chevrons of the throat equally distinct in the female (only two V’s in three of the paratypes) narrower than in gutturalis View in CoL … Venter and enlarged subcaudals immaculate yellow in life—an apparently constant distinction from Lygodactylus picturatus gutturalis ’ ( Schmidt 1919: 466) View in CoL . However, Loveridge (1947: 227), relegated this taxon to a subspecies of L. picturatus View in CoL , stating: ‘ … a somewhat doubtful race, differing from gutturalis View in CoL only in gular and subcaudal markings … ’. This taxonomic action was ignored by Pasteur, 1965(1964), but followed by Wermuth (1965), both authors without justification. Kluge (1993) included L. depressus View in CoL as a full species, in his checklist again without any justification of his taxonomic decision.
Since then this species has been collected in different regions of the Congo Basin. However, this material was overlooked in many publications that revisited the L. picturatus View in CoL group ( Röll et al. 2010, Malonza et al. 2016, 2019). We recovered a genetic clade that is sister to L. gutturalis View in CoL , from the rainforest of the Congo Basin ( Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 6 View Figure 6 ) that differs by c. 9.04% (16S uncorrected p-distance; Table 2) from its sister taxon. Among this material, we included specimens from Lake Tumba, where historical material of L. depressus View in CoL was previously collected. Consequently, we revised historical material collected from the Congo Basin, tentatively attributed to L. gutturalis View in CoL and L. depressus View in CoL (Supporting Information, Table S2). After morphological examination and comparison of preserved specimens (faded), we observed a complete overlap between specimens ascribed to these two taxa, failing to identify any morphological differences based on pholidosis or gular ornamentation. In his description of L. depressus, Schmidt (1919: 466) View in CoL remarked: ‘… coloration dark blueish grey, irregularly mottled with black, more heavily anteriorly …’. However, he also made reference to colour variation recorded by Herbert O. Lang (collector): ‘… one specimen was entirely black when caught, turning blueish grey when injected …’. We observed that two specimens allocated to L. depressus View in CoL and collected at Lotende (a river at Mabali, the site of a colonial-era research station at Lake Tumba; Marlier 1958), Lake Tumba (RMCA 1981.065.R.005) by Laurent, exhibit both colour morphs described for L. depressus View in CoL (mottled and uniform). In contrast, two specimens (RMCA R.8575/A and RMCA R.8575/B) collected from Flandria, Équateur Province, DRC (~ 110 km north-east from the previous locality) and identified by de Witte in 1923 (RMCA unpublished data) as L. gutturalis View in CoL , show the same two dorsal patterns as the previous specimens mentioned above ( Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ). Two additional specimens (RMCA 1038/B and 1038/C) were collected from the Ituri Forest (without a precise locality within this region, but in the same region as the type locality of L. depressus View in CoL ) and tentatively assigned to L. gutturalis View in CoL by de Witte in 1923 (RMCA unpublished data). However, these specimens have morphological characters that are intermediate between these two taxa. Thus, material from DRC and Angola (previously attributed to L. gutturalis View in CoL ), shows substantial morphological overlap with topotypic material of L. depressus View in CoL , making it impossible to differentiate them from the type series ( Figs 15 View Figure 15 , 16 View Figure 16 ). The specimen collected from Angola (MNCN 50772) has a dark blueish coloration in life ( Fig. 15G View Figure 15 ), as described in L. depressus View in CoL . Consequently, due to the high morphological and geographic overlap, we consider that this clade, sister to L. gutturalis View in CoL s.s. ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ), represents L. depressus View in CoL . Nevertheless, we recommend caution until topotypic material can be included in a phylogenetic context, because the possibility of further cryptic diversification within this group cannot be excluded.
A photographic record from Molondou, East Region, Cameroon, reported by Chirio and LeBreton (2007), and attributed to L. depressus , does not agree with the diagnostic dark blueish coloration mentioned by Schmidt (1919). Therefore, because of the highly diverse character of the picturatus subgroup, records from Cameroon and other localities west and north of the Ubangi and Congo rivers might belong to an undescribed taxon.
Holotype ( Fig. 14 View Figure 14 ): AMNH 10345 About AMNH , adult male with original tail, collected at Medje , Ituri Forest, Haut-Uele Province, DRC, on 5 July 1914 by Herbert O. Lang.
Additional material examined (12 specimens): • DRC (10 specimens) : RMCA R.3216 (formerly AMNH 10346 About AMNH ) and MCZ R45987 (formerly AMNH 10344 About AMNH ), males (paratypes), with same collection data as the holotype ; UTEP 22579 About UTEP / UTEP 22582 About UTEP ( ELI 2128 / ELI 2152 ), males, and UTEP 22580–81 About UTEP / UTEP 22583 About UTEP ( ELI 2129–30 / ELI 2153 ), females, collected at Npenda Village, north-east of Lake Tumba , Équateur Province, S00.7465, E18.2243, 311 m a.s.l. on 6 July 2013 by locals and brought to Eli Greenbaum GoogleMaps ; UTEP 22578 About UTEP ( ELI 1547 ), female, collected at Lake Tumba , Équateur Province, c. S00.80, E18.15, 300 m a.s.l. on 13 February 2010 by Chifundera Kusamba GoogleMaps ; UTEP 22595 About UTEP ( ELI 3624 ), female, collected at Katopa , Maniema Province, S02.75128, E25.10403, 455 m a.s.l. on 4 July 2015 by locals and brought to Eli Greenbaum GoogleMaps ; UTEP 22597 About UTEP ( ELI 3585 ), male collected from Katopa , ICCN Camp , Maniema Province, S02.74769, E25.10323, 450 m a.s.l. on 2 July 2015 by Eli Greenbaum. • Angola (two specimens) GoogleMaps : MNCN 50771–72 About MNCN (P1-307 and P1-306), males, collected at Barra do Cuanza , Luanda Province, S09.19518, E13.20327, 7 m a.s.l. on 10 September 2021 by Pedro Vaz Pinto and Timoteo Julio GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis: Lygodactylus depressus is a large-sized Lygodactylus with a maximum SVL 37.8 mm (mean 35.6 ± 1.4 mm) that has the typical gular pattern of the gutturalis group. Seven to nine supralabials and 6–7 infralabials. Dorsal pholidosis with granular scales that become flattened, larger, and imbricate in original tails. Large triangular mental followed by 2–3 symmetric postmental scales ( Fig. 16 View Figure 16 ). Males with 7–8 precloacal pores. Ventral pholidosis with large, flattened, and imbricate scales. Ventral scales usually with small denticulation posteriorly. Digits elongated with five terminal scansors on the fourth toe (Supporting Information, Table S6).
Like other members of the L. gutturalis subgroup, this species can be easily differentiated from L. angularis group members and from other members of the picturatus subgroup by the gular pattern and dorsal colour pattern ( Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ). It should be noted that L. depressus has a dark blueish grey dorsum in life, unlike the light blueish dorsal coloration in the picturatus subgroup.
Lygodactylus depressus can be differentiated from other species within the gutturalis subgroup by having a dark blueish grey coloration of the dorsum, with some specimens having a mottled pattern on the dorsum, vs. brownish or light grey without a mottled pattern in L. gutturalis . However, blackish specimens can only be differentiated by subtle morphometric and meristic data, being almost impossible to differentiate in the field. Lygodactylus depressus can be partially differentiated from L. gutturalis as follows: eye proportionally smaller in L. depressus (OD/HL ≤ 0.25 vs. 0.26–0.31 in L. gutturalis ); and narrower snout (IN/HW ≤ 0.29 vs. 0.30–0.34 in L. gutturalis ). It also differs by a minimum of c. 9.04% uncorrected p-distance for 16S (Table 2), lacks any nuclear haplotype sharing with L. gutturalis in RAG1 ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ), and habitat (rainforest for L. depressus and sub-Saharan savannah for L. gutturalis ). It can also be differentiated from L. dysmicus by having fewer precloacal pores (7–8 vs. 9 in L. dysmicus ) and nostril never in contact with rostral scale vs. nostril contacting the rostral in L. dysmicus . For a distinction from other species not included above, described herein, see the respective diagnoses below.
Coloration: In life ( Fig.15 View Figure 15 ), dorsal colour is highly variable; predominantly dark grey, with lighter grey blotches surrounded by black dots on the flanks, which can form a diffuse dorsolateral band; dark V -shaped line between the eyes (absent in darker specimens), and black line from snout to anterior insertion of the forelimb; tail with diffuse bars of lighter grey; throat usually with white background and black chevrons; venter vivid yellow, orange, or cream from tail tip to posterior part of the gular region. In preservative (holotype; Fig. 14 View Figure 14 ), dorsum grey with dark brown dots from head to midbody; venter uniform light cream to yellow with whitish colouration on all digits.
Variation: Meristic and morphometric data are summarized and depicted in the Supporting Information (Table S6) and Figures 15–16 View Figure 15 View Figure 16 . Lygodactylus depressus is the most variable taxon within the L. gutturalis group with respect to coloration, particularly the gular pattern ( Fig. 16 View Figure 16 ). Some specimens lose the dorsal pattern, resulting in a uniform dorsal coloration. However, other specimens have a mottled dorsal pattern ( Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ).
Habitat and distribution ( Figs 6 View Figure 6 , 15 View Figure 15 ): This species is widely distributed within the Congo Basin, from the Ituri Forest in the north-east, through the heart of the Congo River at Npenda and Lake Tumba, south to Angola at the southernmost extreme of its range. The material from Angola was collected from mangroves growing at the mouth of the Cuanza River. However, all material from DRC was collected in dense Congolian rainforest.
Natural history: Individuals in Angola were observed actively moving and hunting between the branches and trunk of trees during the day, but due to the difficult access to the mangroves, specimens were collected at night while sleeping on thin branches. Specimens from Lotende, DRC, were collected in the canopy, as recorded by Laurent in his field notes.
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Lygodactylus depressus
Lobón-Rovira, Javier, Bauer, Aaron M., Pinto, Pedro Vaz, Trape, Jean-Francois, Conradie, Werner, Kusamba, Chifundera, Júlio, Timóteo, Cael, Garin, Stanley, Edward L., Hughes, Daniel F., Behangana, Mathias, Masudi, Franck M., Pauwels, Olivier S. G. & Greenbaum, Eli 2024 |
Lygodactylus depressus
, Schmidt 1919 |