Abstract
More than a century ago, three species of lizard with similar morphology were described from Ecuador: Anolis binotatus Peters 1863, A. bitectus Cope 1864, and A. lemniscatus Boulenger 1898. We studied the genetics, type material and morphological variation throughout the range of these forms to evaluate the taxonomic status of these names. Our phylogenetic analyses, based on mitochondrial genes such as COI and ND2, and a nuclear gene such as RAG1 revealed three geographically structured clades (northern, central and southern) similar in morphology and coloration, that did not correspond to the three species in question. Similarly, we found no justification for recognizing all three species based on examination of type material and comparisons of morphology across the geographic range of specimens assigned to the three species. Although there were significant differences in snout length and the number of scales between the interparietal and supraorbital semicircles among recovered molecular clades, we do not consider these differences as diagnostic at the species level. Therefore, we propose that A. binotatus is a senior synonym of both A. bitectus and A. lemniscatus. We provide a new description and variation of A. binotatus, including hemipenis, natural history, geographic distribution and conservation status.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 27-50 |
| Number of pages | 24 |
| Journal | Zootaxa |
| Volume | 5647 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 12 Jun 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:Copyright © 2025 Magnolia Press.
Funding
We thank Mónica Guerra (EPN), María Elena Barragán (FHGO), and Mario Yánez-Muñoz (DHMECN) for loans of museum specimens. Mark-Oliver Rödel (ZMB) for lending us the holotype of Anolis binotatus. Jonatthan Losos and José Rosado (MCZ) for lending us the syntype of Anolis lemniscatus. Jeff Streicher (BMNH) for photos of type specimens of A. bitectus and A. lemniscatus. F. Ayala-Varela thanks Juan Carlos Sánchez for his help with information. Santiago Guamán for support in the collection. Andrés Merino-Viteri, Andrés Merino Toapanta, and Pablo Menéndez for guidance in statistical analysis. Karen Padilla, Joselyn Durán, Susan Muñoz, and Mayra Tacuri for help in the lab. Jhael Ortega, Doménica Aguirre, and Daniel Chávez for support with bioinformatics. Anderson Ocampos for support in spatial analysis in ARCGIS. Andrés Romero and Ivanna Villalba for allowing the use of the camera and stereomicroscope. María Juana Parada for help with translations. Paulina Santiana, Sebastián Valverde and Yerka Sagredo for editing photos. F. Ayala-Varela dedicates this paper to Taryn Ghia, the woman who accompanied me all this time and for trusting me. Specimens were collected under collection permits 008-09-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 001-10-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 005-14-IC-FAUDNB/MA, 003-15-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 003-17-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 011-2018-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, MAE-DNB-CM-2015-0025, and MAAE-DBI-DBI-CM-2022-0222 issued by the Ministerio del Ambiente, Agua y Transición Ecológica. This work was funded by SENESCYT under the ‘Arca de Noé’ Initiative (PIs: S.R. Ron and O. Torres-Carvajal) and Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador (QINV0432-IINV529010100).
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| 003-17-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 008-09-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 005-14-IC-FAUDNB/MA, MAE-DNB-CM-2015-0025, 003-15-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, MAAE-DBI-DBI-CM-2022-0222, 001-10-IC-FAU-DNB/MA, 011-2018-IC-FAU-DNB/MA | |
| Pontifical Catholic University of Ecuador | QINV0432-IINV529010100 |
Keywords
- Draconura
- Norops
- phylogeny
- synonymy
- types