AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Lepidodactylus aignanus

Lepidodactylus aignanus

Kraus, 2019

GBIF:159043710

0year

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Descriptions(1)

Fig. 1 A, C urn: lsid: zoobank. org: act: 30092897 - 73 B 1 - 4 AF 5 - 8 CBE- 5514 EA 3 F 484 B Holotype. BPBM 17229 (field tag FK 6989), mature female, obtained by F. Kraus from local collector at Liak, 10.6594 ° S, 152.6941 ° E, near sea level, Misima Island, Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea, 13 January 2003. Diagnosis. A small (adult SVL 37.5 mm) species of Lepidodactylus having a subcylindrical tail without a lateral fringe of enlarged scales; all subterminal scansors entire; 17 enlarged scales of pore-bearing series limited to precloacal region; 11 – 12 T 4 lamellae, 7 – 9 T 1 lamellae; fairly wide toes (T 4 W / T 4 L = 0.33); toes approximately onequarter webbed (T 3 T 4 webL / T 4 L = 0.26); dorsum with several irregular dark-brown saddles, and many pale lateral and dorsolateral round spots, especially concentrated from forearm to eye. Comparisons with other species. The subcylindrical tail without a lateral fringe of enlarged scales and the series of undivided scansors under all toes place Lepidodactylus aignanus sp. nov. in Brown and Parker’s (1977) Group I. Lepidodactylus aignanus sp. nov. differs from other Melanesian members of this group as follows: from L. flaviocularis Brown, McCoy & Rodda, L. magnus Brown & Parker, L. mutahi Brown & Parker, and L. pumilus in having 17 enlarged precloacal scales (versus 26 – 50 enlarged precloacal / femoral scales in the other species) limited to the precloacal region (extending far onto the thighs in the other species); from L. browni Pernetta & Black and L. orientalis Brown & Parker in having 17 enlarged precloacal scales (versus 19 – 27 in L. orientalis and 22 – 39 in L. browni), toes with more webbing (T 3 T 4 webL / T 4 L = 0.26 versus 0.11 – 0.16 in L. browni and 0.10 – 0.14 in L. orientalis, Fig. 1 C), and dorsum with many pale lateral and dorsolateral round spots (Fig. 1 A), especially concentrated from forearm to eye (versus absent in L. browni and L. orientalis, or with few vague dorsolateral spots behind forearm in one specimen of L. browni). Description of holotype. A mature female, with right-lateral incision. Animal small (SVL = 37.5 mm, TrL = 18.3 mm). Head relatively long (HL / SVL = 0.23) and wide (HW / HL = 0.80), distinct from neck. Loreal region slightly inflated; no distinct canthus rostralis. Interorbital region and top of snout concave. Snout tapered and rounded at tip, relatively long (SN / HL = 0.41), longer than eye diameter (SN / EY = 1.6). Eye relatively large (EY / HL = 0.26, EY / EN = 0.76); pupil vertical, constricted into series of four lobes; supraciliaries subequal in size to adjacent granules. Ear opening small (Ear / HL = 0.070), somewhat compressed, oriented diagonally from posterodorsal to anteroventral; distance between ear and eye larger than eye diameter (EE / EY = 1.4). Rostral wider (1.8 mm) than high (0.8 mm), highest just medial to nares, lower between these points; length 0.4 mm. Supranasals separated by three internasals. Rostral in contact with first supralabials, two supranasals, and three internasals. External nares circular; each bordered by rostral, two supranasals, first supralabial, and one postnasal. Mental shallowly triangular, slightly longer (0.65 mm) than wide (0.60 mm). Mental bordered posteriorly by two enlarged postmentals, these bordered posteriorly by two rows of slightly enlarged scales prior to granular chin scales. Infralabials bordered by enlarged scales that gradually decrease in size posteriorly. Supralabials to mid-orbital position nine on each side; to angle of jaw 13 on right, 12 on left. Infralabials 11 on each side. Body of modest habitus (TrL / SVL = 0.49), slightly depressed. Dorsal scales on head, body, and limbs tiny, juxtaposed granules; tubercles absent. Ventral scales flat and smooth; those on throat smaller and juxtaposed; those on abdomen larger and subimbricate, gradually decreasing in size laterally and on chin to become granular. Enlarged precloacal scales 17, in a single short series; no enlarged scales on thighs. Enlarged scales form a pubic patch between the precloacal series and vent; no row of tiny scales between the precloacal series and either side of the pubic patch; ten scales in a row between apex of enlarged precloacal series and vent. Scales on palms and soles rounded, smooth. Fore- and hindlimbs relatively small (FA / SVL = 0.083, CS / SVL = 0.12). Digits well-developed, moderately dilated throughout their length (T 4 W / T 4 L = 0.33), all but first fingers and toes with recurved claws; clawed phalanges laterally compressed, free above and extending slightly beyond terminal scansors. Subdigital scansors narrow and smooth, all undivided except for three terminal scansors divided on left third toe; lamellae extend for more than half length of each toe (T 4 scansor L / T 4 L = 0.62, Fig. 1 C). Lamellae of manus 7 – 9 – 11 – 11 – 9 on right, 8 – 8 – 10 – 11 – 8 on left; of pes 8 – 10 – 11 – 12 – 10 on right, 9 – 9 – 10 – 11 – 10 on left. Relative lengths of digits on manus and pes I
Kraus, Fred (2019): New species of Lepidodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from New Guinea and adjacent islands. Zootaxa 4651 (2): 305-329, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4651.2.7

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FIGURE 1. Dorsal views of holotypes of (A) Lepidodactylus aignanus sp. nov., BPBM 17229, and (B) L. zweifeli sp. nov., AMNH 105088; right foot of holotypes of (C) Lepidodactylus aignanus sp. nov., BPBM 17229, and (D) L. zweifeli sp. nov., AMNH 105088. Scale = 2 mm.

Imageimage/png© Kraus, FredKraus, Fred

FIGURE 2. Map of New Guinea and surrounding islands showing type localities for Lepidodactylus aignanus sp. nov. (diamond), L. dialeukos sp. nov. (triangle), L. kwasnickae sp. nov. (square), L. mitchelli sp. nov. (circle), and L. zweifeli sp. nov. (star).

Imageimage/png© Kraus, FredKraus, Fred

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Source Information

New species of Lepidodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from New Guinea and adjacent islands

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Kraus, Fred (2019): New species of Lepidodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from New Guinea and adjacent islands. Zootaxa 4651 (2): 305-329, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4651.2.7

Abstract

I describe five new species of Lepidodactylus from New Guinea or adjacent islands that are members of Brown & Parker’s (1977) phenetic Groups I and II and belong to the clades identified as the L. orientalis, L. pumilus, and L. novaeguineae groups of Oliver et al. (2018a). One of the new species is restricted to an isolated mountain range on New Guinea; the remainder inhabit offshore islands ranging from 3–250 km from New Guinea. These species are distinguished from their congeners primarily by unique combinations of toe lamellar numbers and shape, numbers and distribution of enlarged precloacal/femoral scales and pores, toe webbing, toe width, and color pattern. These clades are ancient, and the ancestor of one of them has been on the East Papuan Composite Terrane for at least 28 MY, highlighting the long-term importance of that former large island in generating regional biodiversity. At least one, and probably three, of the new species are inhabitants of forest interiors; one occupies disturbed coastal areas; and the habitat of the last is currently unsurmisable. All of the new species likely have restricted geographic distributions, with four of them being limited to one or a few small islands. As a result of their small ranges, rapid habitat conversion in the ranges of some of these species, and the threat of further habitat loss in the others, most of these species are of conservation concern although it is uncertain if any of them is under immediate threat.

Kraus F, plazi (2019). New species of Lepidodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from New Guinea and adjacent islands. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4651.2.7 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-15.

CC0Published 8/5/2019View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
159043710
Dataset Key
00ad1537-4dda-475f-8007-991dc1f0eac8
Origin
source
Backbone Key
10028107
Taxon ID
3E6D87E38053FFBAFF3E7443DDAFFCEE.taxon
Last Crawled
6/10/2026
Last Interpreted
6/10/2026