Emoia reimschisseli Tanner, 1950

Karin, Benjamin R., Stubbs, Alexander L., Arifin, Umilaela, Bloch, Luke M., Ramadhan, G., Iskandar, Djoko T., Arida, Evy, Reilly, Sean B., Kusnadi, Agus & Mcguire, Jimmy A., 2018, The herpetofauna of the Kei Islands (Maluku, Indonesia): Comprehensive report on new and historical collections, biogeographic patterns, conservation concerns, and an annotated checklist of species from Kei Kecil, Kei Besar, Tam, and Kur, Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 66, pp. 704-738 : 723-724

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5363075

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DC2B423B-55FE-4F92-985E-39F5A61EE04C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5493176

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A8879D-FFE2-FFE6-79D1-F8B2116C9CDD

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Emoia reimschisseli Tanner, 1950
status

 

Emoia reimschisseli Tanner, 1950

Type locality. Morotai , Indonesia .

Distribution in the Kei Islands. We collected a large series of Emoia reimschisseli from Kei Kecil, and also collected this species on Kei Besar and Kur.

Natural history. This species was extremely common in the leaf litter and among rotting logs of secondary growth forest in rocky soil.

Field identification. A small to medium sized skink with three narrow, yellow longitudinal stripes on a blackish dorsum. Tail bright blue in juveniles, white to dirty white in adults. Emoia reimschisseli shows nearly identical morphology to E. caeruleocauda and E. cyanura with which Kei Islands specimens have been formerly been referred to. They are distinguished only by the number of subdigital lamellae and in some populations by the number of midbody scale rows (though mid-body scale rows often do not differ) ( Brown, 1991; How et al., 1998). 29–35 mid-body scale rows (rarely more than 30); 32–39 rounded lamellae under the fourth toe; SVL 39–57 mm ( Brown, 1991).

Remarks. Originally reported as Emoia cyanura ( Doria, 1875; Roux, 1910; de Rooij, 1915), the WAM expedition to Kei Besar reported a subsequently described yellowlined Emoia , E. reimschisseli ( How et al., 1998) . Emoia reimschisseli was described from Morotai and Halmahera ( Tanner, 1950), and also inhabits the Aru Islands and a single specimen was collected from Selaru in the Tanimbar group that is morphologically divergent and may represent a distinct species ( How et al., 1998).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Scincidae

Genus

Emoia

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