Anolis alutaceus, Cope, 1861

Nicholson, Kirsten E., Crother, Brian I., Guyer, Craig & Savage, Jay M., 2012, 3477, Zootaxa 3477, pp. 1-108 : 35-36

publication ID

32126D3A-04BC-4AAC-89C5-F407AE28021C

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:32126D3A-04BC-4AAC-89C5-F407AE28021C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5257481

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DA653D5C-5260-FFDE-B1FC-CF36FACFE376

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anolis alutaceus
status

 

Anolis alutaceus Species Group

Diagnosis. — Support for this group is provided by 81 apomorphies including eight morphological and 73 molecular ones. There are six unequivocal morphological apomorphies: maximum male snout-to-vent length decreased (1: f to a); size of ear opening increased (6: m to q); tail length about 2.5 or more times snout-to-vent length (8: s to v); five or more enlarged rows of middorsal scales (13: a to z); modal number of supraciliary scales two (38: 1 to 2); and scales in supraorbital disc vary continuously in size and are bordered medially by an unbroken row of small scales (41: 0 to 1). There are 40 unequivocal molecular apomorphies (see Appendix II).

Definition. — Lizards of this species group are very small to small, gracile anoles (maximum snout-to-vent length in adult males 33 to 49 and 31 to 45 mm in adult females) sharing the following combination of characters: 1) no transparent scales in lower eyelid; 2) interparietal scale small, about same size as adjacent scales; 3) head narrow, length much longer than width; 4) legs long and slender; 5) tail long, about 2.5 to 2.7 times snout-to-vent length; 6) dewlap absent in females; 7) five or six lumbar vertebrae; 8) usually seven or more aseptate vertebrae anterior to first autotomic caudal vertebrae, rarely six.

Content. — This species group contains 14 species and a total of 15 species and subspecies (see Appendix III).

Distribution. — Cuba and its satellite islands ( Fig. 20).

Remarks. — In the Poe (2004) tree, members of this group form the sister group to Chamaelinorops barbouri . In our molecular and combined trees they fall out well within the Anolis clade, and are referred to that genus.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Dactyloidae

Genus

Anolis

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