Siderolamprinae, Schools & Hedges, 2021
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4974.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0CCA430E-5601-42CB-847F-87B22BFD3112 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4775471 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DA66BA10-FFFA-FFDE-0DF1-0E66074FD6A9 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Siderolamprinae |
status |
subfam. nov. |
Subfamily Siderolamprinae subfam. nov.
Mesoamerican Forest Lizards
Fig. 26 View FIGURE 26
Type genus. Siderolamprus Cope, 1861 .
Diagnosis. Members of this subfamily have (1) claw sheath, present or absent, (2) contact between the nasal and rostral scales, present or absent, (3) scales in contact with the nasal scale, six, (4) postnasal scales, two, (5) position of the nostril in the nasal scale, posterior, (6) keels on dorsal body scales, present or absent, (7) digits per limb, five, (8) longest toe lamellae, 11–35, (9) dorsal scale rows, 65–85, (10) relative head width, 9.88–15.6, (11) relative rostral height, 44.7–67.0, (12) relative frontonasal length, 2.46–2.88, (13) relative interparietal distance, 0.561–1.14, (14) relative axilla-groin distance, 53.5–65.3.
The subfamily Siderolamprinae is distinguished from the other two subfamilies by scales in contact with the nasal scale (six instead of four in Celestinae subfam. nov.), the position of the nostril in the nasal scale (posterior instead of central in Celestinae subfam. nov.), and the number of dorsal scales (65–85 instead of 88–171 in Diploglossinae ).
Content. Fifteen currently recognized species in two genera: Siderolamprus Cope, 1861 and Mesoamericus gen. nov. (15 sp.).
Distribution. This subfamily occurs in Middle America, from southern Mexico to Panama.
Etymology. As for the type genus.
Remarks. The subfamily Siderolamprinae is monophyletic with a Bayesian support value of 96% and a ML support value of 93% ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). We have identified two genera that fall into this subfamily based on molecular and morphological evidence, Mesoamericus gen. nov. and Siderolamprus , both represented in our molecular phylogeny. Cope (1861) used Siderolamprus to define Siderolamprus enneagrammus before it became a synonym of Celestus .
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