Lygodactylus guibei Pasteur, 1965

Vences, Miguel, Multzsch, Malte, Gippner, Sven, Miralles, Aurélien, Crottini, Angelica, Gehring, Philip-Sebastian, Rakotoarison, Andolalao, Ratsoavina, Fanomezana M., Glaw, Frank & Scherz, Mark D., 2022, Integrative revision of the Lygodactylus madagascariensis group reveals an unexpected diversity of little brown geckos in Madagascar’s rainforest, Zootaxa 5179 (1), pp. 1-61 : 23-25

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5179.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:70366A84-EBDE-427D-B525-09E5A2D81EB5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7047003

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8F0B3E1E-133C-BF23-FF28-F9DCFB5843BA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lygodactylus guibei Pasteur, 1965
status

 

Lygodactylus guibei Pasteur, 1965

Lygodactylus (Domerguella) guibei Pasteur, 1965

Partial chresonymy

Lygodactylus guibei: Kluge (1991) ; Glaw & Vences (1992, 1994, 2007); Puente et al. (2005, 2009); Röll et al. (2010); Gippner et al. (2021)

Lygodactylus (Domerguella) guibei: Rösler (2000b) .

Name-bearing type: holotype MNHN 1993.60 View Materials from “Périnet (Est)” (=Andasibe), according to the original description.—Other types: According to the original description, there were two paratypes; we only were able to locate MNHN 1933.156 View Materials .—Etymology: Eponym for Jean Guibé .

Identity and Diagnosis. The holotype agrees well morphologically with most other individuals assigned to this species by relatively low longitudinal counts of dorsal scales (<200) and ventral scales (<100) while most individuals assigned to L. miops have higher counts (>200 />100). Despite some overlap in these variables, the differences between the two lineages seem to allow a distinction of most individuals. Furthermore, L. guibei does not reach the high INFL and NNS counts of some L. miops individuals, reaches larger body sizes, and males are characterized by more distinct lateral tubercles at the base of the tail, judging from the specimens morphologically examined herein. Specimens appear to have a rather indistinct dorsal pattern ( Fig. 14 View FIGURE 14 ). Two photographed individuals have a conspicuous stripe-like row of dark spots on the chest ( Fig. 14C, E View FIGURE 14 ) but this pattern is absent in most other individuals examined.

Distribution. L. guibei is known from several localities in the Northern Central East of Madagascar: (1) the type locality Andasibe, (2) Vohidrazana, (3) Moramanga, (4) Anjozorobe, (5) Mahasoa Forest (based on ND4 sequences of Gippner et al. 2021), and (6) Angozongahy on the west slope of the Makira Reserve.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Gekkonidae

Genus

Lygodactylus

Loc

Lygodactylus guibei Pasteur, 1965

Vences, Miguel, Multzsch, Malte, Gippner, Sven, Miralles, Aurélien, Crottini, Angelica, Gehring, Philip-Sebastian, Rakotoarison, Andolalao, Ratsoavina, Fanomezana M., Glaw, Frank & Scherz, Mark D. 2022
2022
Loc

Lygodactylus (Domerguella) guibei: Rösler (2000b)

: Rosler 2000
2000
Loc

Lygodactylus guibei:

Kluge 1991
1991
Loc

Lygodactylus (Domerguella) guibei

Pasteur 1965
1965
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