Gelanesaurus sp.

Diago-Toro, María F., García-Cobos, Daniela, Brigante-Luna, Giovanni D. & Vásquez-Restrepo, Juan D., 2021, Fantastic lizards and where to find them: cis-Andean microteiids (Squamata: Alopoglossidae & Gymnophthalmidae) from the Colombian Orinoquia and Amazonia, Zootaxa 5067 (3), pp. 377-400 : 387

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5067.3.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F64E5226-B4DD-44A3-A83E-E05928B82F4B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5699689

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C787E7-C311-FF98-FF41-985A5CD24705

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gelanesaurus sp.
status

 

Gelanesaurus sp.

Distribution: Along the Amazon foothills of Ecuador and Colombia ( Fang et al. 2020; Gutiérrez et al. 2020). In Colombia this genus is known from the Putumayo and Caquetá departments ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ).

Similar species: The species of Gelanesaurus resemble superficially to Neusticurus medemi and Potamites ecpleopus , however, they can be distinguished in having four rows of enlarged keeled scales on dorsum forming longitudinal ridges (small irregular scales non-forming ridges in N. medemi , and six rows of tubercles in P. ecpleopus ); and a black spot in the nostril (without black spot in N. medemi and P. ecpleopus ). Within Gelanesaurus , G. cochranae and G. flavogularis are distinguished by the number of scales around midbody (45–56 in G. cochranae , 37–48 in G. flavogularis ); the number of lamellae under toe IV (18–21 in G. cochranae , 15–18 in G. flavogularis ); the number of femoral pores in males (22–25 in G. cochranae , 19–21 in G. flavogularis ); and sexual dimorphism in color (absent in G. cochranae , present in G. flavogularis with males having a conspicuous white or cream gular and ventral region whereas females possess a brownish coloration). See Fang et al. (2020) for a detailed description.

Remarks: We could not examine most of the available specimens from Colombia because they are being used by other researchers in an ongoing study. However, we obtained in-life photographs of individuals from Caquetá and Putumayo, and one of them agreed with the conspicuous gular coloration present in the males of G. flavogularis . Since G. flavogularis has not been officially reported for Colombia and we could not corroborate its presence with a supporting voucher specimen, we preferred to be conservative and report the genus only, considering that there may be more than one species in Colombia.

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