AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Agama anchietae

Agama anchietae

Bocage, 1896

GBIF:304193367

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ABOUT

Descriptions(1)

Agama anchietae Bocage, 1896 *

Specimens.

Angola: Catumbella: BMNH 1893.12.27.7 , “ Région Littorale ”: BMNH 1946.8.27.97 [syntype, originally BMNH 1896.6.9.4; Fig. 16] .

Comments.

Bocage (1867 a) initially assigned material from coastal Angola (three specimens collected by Anchieta in “ Dombe ”, “ Benguella ” and “ Catumbella ”) to Agama aculeata . In the years that followed he received additional material from this region and started to note differences between these specimens and those from the Angolan hinterland, presenting a specimen from Catumbela to the British Museum in 1893 identified as “ Agama sp. ? ” (BMNH 1893.12.27.7). Bocage (1895 a) recorded this distinction some years later in his major work on Angolan herpetofauna, noting specimens sent by Anchieta from “ Benguella ”, “ Catumbella ” and “ Dombe ”, and by Hermenegildo Capello (1841–1917) and Roberto Ivens (1850–1898) from “ Mossamedes ” to differ from those from the high plateaus of the Angolan hinterland, which he assigned to Agama armata (see Agama cf. aculeata aculeata account above). Although he noted the coastal specimens as distinct in a note following the Agama armata account, Bocage (1895 a) refrained from naming this material at the time. On 3 April 1896, Bocage wrote to Boulenger asking for a specimen of Agama aculeata to compare with his material from coastal Angola (NHMA /DF/ZOO/235/1/1/1/76), to which Boulenger conceded by sending to Lisbon an adult male from Beaufort West, South Africa (AHMB /CE/B48). Shortly after, in a letter dated 2 June 1896, Bocage mentioned a shipment of ground agamas to the British Museum containing three samples, including an adult from Angola, “ Région Littorale ” (No. 2), that he believed to represent a new species (NHMA /DF/ZOO/235/1/1/1/76; Fig. 3). Later that year, Bocage (1896 b) formally described the populations from coastal Angola as Agama anchietae, based on the previously mentioned material collected by Anchieta in “ Benguella ”, “ Catumbella ” and “ Dombe ”, and by Capello and Ivens in “ Mossamedes ”.

In a revision of the Agama hispida and atra groups, Boulenger and Power (1921) recognized Agama anchieta as a valid species. The authors mentioned two specimens sent by Bocage to the British Museum, referring to a specimen from Caconda as “ one of the types ”. Marques et al. (2018) noted that this could not be a type, as Bocage (1895 a, 1896 b) never recorded the species from Caconda, and instead referred his material from that locality, in the highlands of the Angolan plateau, to Agama armata . Although it is impossible to state with certainty what led Boulenger and Power (1921) to record the type specimen as originating from Caconda, we are confident that this was done in error, as Bocage never mentioned this locality in his letters, nor is it stated in the original specimen label or the register. The locality “ Caconda, Coast of Angola ” appears only on the current label on the exterior of the specimen jar, which is a subsequent label presumably added when the specimen was reregistered as type in 1946, perpetuating Boulenger and Power’s (1921) error. While this is merely speculation, the source of the error may have been a misplaced label or confusion with other Agama specimens from Caconda sent by Bocage years earlier (see Agama cf. aculeata aculeata account). Considering this, we hereby correct the locality of the only surviving syntype of Agama anchietae (BMNH 1946.8.27.97; Fig. 16) to “ Région Littorale, Angola ”, corresponding to one of the coastal localities stated in the original description: Benguela, Catumbela, Dombe or Moçâmedes.

Parrinha, Diogo, Calado, Francisco M. G., Marques, Mariana P., Bauer, Aaron M., Ceríaco, Luis M. P. (2025): Echoes of a lost museum: Revision of the herpetological collections sent by Barbosa du Bocage from the Lisbon Museum to the British Museum of Natural History. Vertebrate Zoology 75: 353-404, DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e169790Pensoft via PlaziNo 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.

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Media Files(2)

Figure 3. Sources of data examined. A Register noting specimens presented by Bocage; B Specimen jar with external label; C Original specimen label with locality and number mentioned in Bocage’s letter; D Extract of Bocage’s letter citing numbered specimens (NHMA / DF / ZOO / 235 / 1 / 1 / 1 / 76). Photos by DP.

Imageimage/png© Parrinha, Diogo;Calado, Francisco M. G.;Marques, Mariana P.;Bauer, Aaron M.;Ceríaco, Luis M. P.Parrinha, Diogo;Calado, Francisco M. G.;Marques, Mariana P.;Bauer, Aaron M.;Ceríaco, Luis M. P.

Figure 16. Syntype of Agama anchietae (BMNH 1946.8. 27.97). Photos by DP.

Imageimage/png© Parrinha, Diogo;Calado, Francisco M. G.;Marques, Mariana P.;Bauer, Aaron M.;Ceríaco, Luis M. P.Parrinha, Diogo;Calado, Francisco M. G.;Marques, Mariana P.;Bauer, Aaron M.;Ceríaco, Luis M. P.

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Source Information

Echoes of a lost museum: Revision of the herpetological collections sent by Barbosa du Bocage from the Lisbon Museum to the British Museum of Natural History

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Parrinha, Diogo, Calado, Francisco M. G., Marques, Mariana P., Bauer, Aaron M., Ceríaco, Luis M. P. (2025): Echoes of a lost museum: Revision of the herpetological collections sent by Barbosa du Bocage from the Lisbon Museum to the British Museum of Natural History. Vertebrate Zoology 75: 353-404, DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e169790

Abstract

As part of a nineteenth century scientific network, José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage regularly sent “duplicate” specimens from the zoological collections of the National Museum of Lisbon to natural history museums across Europe. These duplicates gained exceptional significance following the 1978 fire that destroyed the Lisbon Museum’s zoological collections, making them the last surviving representatives of its historical holdings. Despite their importance for taxonomic and nomenclatural stability, the full extent of Bocage’s duplicate specimens remains poorly documented. Here we present a comprehensive and integrative revision of the herpetological material sent by Bocage to the British Museum of Natural History. We assess its historical, taxonomic and nomenclatural value, providing an illustrated and annotated catalogue of type specimens. A total of 92 specimens representing 57 species were sent from Lisbon between 1864 and 1896, including 30 type specimens for 27 nominal taxa. We provide evidence for the correction of the type locality associated with the only surviving syntype of Agama anchietae, as well as the recognition of previously unknown types of Chioglossa lusitanica, Hylambates angolensis, Hylambates cynnamomeus, Cystignathus bocagii, Hyperolius insignis, Hyperolius huillensis, Hemidactylus cessacii and Ophirhina anchietae.

Parrinha D, Calado F M G, Marques M P, Bauer A M, Ceríaco L M P, pensoft (2025). Echoes of a lost museum: Revision of the herpetological collections sent by Barbosa du Bocage from the Lisbon Museum to the British Museum of Natural History. Vertebrate Zoology. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/mu7a9c accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-18.

CC0Published 10/22/2025View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
304193367
Dataset Key
feb63d25-76a8-4bff-bba1-156efd22611e
Origin
source
Backbone Key
5226326
Taxon ID
15034EA416F65629980667ADA01762E3.taxon
Last Crawled
6/15/2026
Last Interpreted
6/15/2026