Liolaemus anomalus, Koslowsky, 1896

Pincheira-Donoso, Daniel, Scolaro, J. Alejandro & Sura, Piotr, 2008, A monographic catalogue on the systematics and phylogeny of the South American iguanian lizard family Liolaemidae (Squamata, Iguania), Zootaxa 1800, pp. 1-85 : 47

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6789337

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6789593

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/341FFA64-FF9E-6136-6CFB-EAA8FDB98BBD

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-07-23 01:44:56, last updated 2024-11-29 09:36:36)

scientific name

Liolaemus anomalus
status

 

Clade anomalus View in CoL

Recent phylogenetic evidence (e.g. Espinoza et al. 2004, Abdala 2007) suggests that L. anomalus , L. ditadai , L. duellmani and L. pseudoanomalus might form a natural group closely related to the boulengeri complex (or even a phylogenetic line nested within this complex; e.g. Pincheira-Donoso et al. 2007a; see also Abdala 2007). Although we recognize that further studies might be needed to support Espinoza et al. ’s (2004) and Abdala’s (2007) phylogenetic hypotheses with additional evidence, we also recognize their value, and hence, this is the position we adopt in our work.

Abdala, C. S. (2007) Phylogeny of the boulengeri group (Iguania: Liolaemidae, Liolaemus) based on morphological and molecular characters. Zootaxa, 1538, 1 - 84.

Espinoza, R. E., Wiens, J. J. & Tracy, C. R. (2004) Recurrent evolution of herbivory in small, cold-climate lizards: Breaking the ecophysiological rules or reptilian herbivory. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 101, 16819 - 16824.

Pincheira-Donoso, D., Scolaro, J. A. & Schulte II, J. A. (2007 a) The limits of polymorphism in Liolaemus rothi: molecular and phenotypic evidence for a new species of the Liolaemus boulengeri clade (Iguanidae, Liolaemini) from boreal Patagonia of Chile. Zootaxa, 1452, 25 - 42.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

SuperFamily

Iguania

Family

Liolaemidae

Genus

Liolaemus

SubGenus

Eulaemus