Nubeoscincus, Slavenko & Tamar & Tallowin & Kraus & Allison & Carranza & Meiri, 2022

Slavenko, Alex, Tamar, Karin, Tallowin, Oliver J S, Kraus, Fred, Allison, Allen, Carranza, Salvador & Meiri, Shai, 2022, Revision of the montane New Guinean skink genus Lobulia (Squamata: Scincidae), with the description of four new genera and nine new species, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 195 (1), pp. 220-278 : 237-238

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab052

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6536312

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EF4E77-7C06-CA69-FC70-FC782189FCF6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Nubeoscincus
status

gen. nov.

NUBEOSCINCUS View in CoL View at ENA GEN. NOV.

(CLADE III)

( FIG. 5 View Figure 5 , SUPPORTING INFORMATION, FIGS S6 View Figure 6 , S 8 View Figure 8 ; TABLE 1 View Table 1 )

Z o o b a n k r e g i s t r a t i o n: u r n:l s i d: z o o b a n k. org:act: 21B16380-F7EE-48CF-806C-699AAC63F491

Type species: Lobulia glacialis Greer et al., 2005 . Herpetological Monographs 19: 153–179.

Diagnosis: Medium-sized (adult SVL 47.4–64.0 mm) terrestrial skinks with short limbs (forelimbs 28.7– 34.4% of SVL, hindlimbs 34.6–38.6% of SVL); lobules either present or absent from anterior edge of ear opening; two pairs of chin shields in medial contact; two supralabials posterior to subocular supralabial; chin shields separated from infralabials by a row of genials; lower eyelid with window of variable size, opaqueness and scaliness; temporal region fragmented (> 3 scales); nasal scale undivided; frontoparietals unfused; viviparous; litter size up to three.

Nubeoscincus View in CoL differs from Prasinohaema by lacking green blood serum and tissues ( Greer, 1974), a prehensile tail with a glandular tip and basally expanded subdigital lamellae. It differs from Lobulia and Papuascincus by having the chin shields separated from the infralabials by a row of genials (vs. chin shields abutting infralabials) and by having a fragmented temporal region (vs. the standard three-scale arrangement). It further differs from Papuascincus by having two pairs of chin shields in medial contact (vs. one), unfused (vs. fused) frontoparietals, a viviparous (vs. oviparous) reproductive mode and an undivided (vs. divided) nasal scale.

Etymology: A combinatorial noun derived from the Latin nouns nubes, cloud, and scincus, a type of lizard, in reference to the extremely high elevations at which species in this genus occur.

Species included: Nubeoscincus glacialis ( Greer et al., 2005) View in CoL comb. nov.; Nubeoscincus stellaris ( Greer et al., 2005) View in CoL comb. nov.

Distribution: Both species of Nubeoscincus View in CoL occur at extremely high elevations from the western New Guinea Highlands to the western (Indonesian) parts of the island and are known from extremely limited distributions: N. glacialis View in CoL near Puncak Jaya in the Sudirman Range, Papua Province ( Indonesia), and N. stellaris View in CoL from the Star Mountains in West Sepik Province ( Papua New Guinea).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Squamata

Order

Reptilia

Family

Scincidae

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