Scincus Garsault, 1764
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.195113 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5629427 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D887CC-FFE6-FFAF-24FB-FB58FB6DFE82 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Scincus Garsault, 1764 |
status |
|
The plate 670 of Garsault (1764) shows a specimen named Scincus or “Scine” (the correct vernacular “Scinc” is used in p. 18 of the list of plates, as well as in the subsequent accounts in Garsault 1765, 1767), a lizard which obviously belongs in the genus currently known as Scincus Laurenti, 1768 (family SCINCIDAE Oppel, 1811 b 3).
Laurenti’s genus Scincus was described with two prenucleospecies and Fitzinger (1843: 23) designated Scincus officinalis Laurenti 1768 (onymotope: “ in AEgypto ”) as nucleospecies. The latter nomen is a subjective synonym of Lacerta scincus Linnaeus, 1758 , and this species is now known as Scincus scincus ( Linnaeus, 1758) . The genus Scincus includes three to five species, according to the authors. In the last partial revision of this genus ( Carranza et al. 2008), the former subspecies Scincus scincus albifasciatus Boulenger, 1890 was recognized as a full species, including the subspecies Scincus albifasciatus laterimaculatus Werner, 1914 . We follow here this taxonomy. The specimen shown by Garsault (1764) fully agrees with this latter taxon, known from central Morocco and north-western Algeria. Its main external character is a set of lateral bands interrupted on the back ( Werner 1914: 13, pl.; Schleich et al. 1996: 363; Bons & Geniez 1996: 200– 201; Geniez et al. 2004: 135), which are conspicuous in Garsault’s (1764) plate.
We hereby designate Scincus scincus var. laterimaculatus Werner, 1914 (onymotope: western Algeria), as nucleospecies of Scincus Garsault, 1764 . The distinct nomina Scincus Garsault, 1764 and Scincus Laurenti ,
3. The nomen of this family is traditionally (e.g., Dowling & Duellman 1978: 86.1; Ananjeva et al. 1988: 232; Mecke et al. 2009) credited to Gray (1825), but it was in fact created, as SCINCOIDES, by Oppel (1811 b: 76), and used again later, as SCINCIDIA, by Rafinesque (1815: 76).
1768 are therefore now doxisonyms, and the first one is now the valid nomen of the genus. The three to five species currently referred to this genus ( Arnold & Leviton 1977; Carranza et al. 2008) keep their nomina unchanged, but the nominal-complex is modified for those here transferred from Scincus Laurenti, 1768 to Scincus Garsault, 1764 , the author’s name and the date being now between parentheses: Scincus albifasciatus ( Boulenger, 1890) , Scincus conirostris ( Blanford, 1881) , Scincus hemprichii ( Wiegmann, 1837) , Scincus mitranus ( Anderson, 1871) and Scincus scincus ( Linnaeus, 1758) , and their subspecies.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.