Hemidactylus robustus Heyden, 1827
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3855.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0E2D2B7C-7A96-4CAB-87F2-87A785F88D7F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4929228 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387F2-FF9F-FFAA-FF5B-4D065793FA5E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe (2021-06-11 19:30:47, last updated by Guilherme 2025-01-02 16:29:43) |
scientific name |
Hemidactylus robustus Heyden, 1827 |
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Hemidactylus robustus Heyden, 1827
LECTOTYPE. SMF 8720 About SMF , designated by Mertens (1967).
TYPE LOCALITY. Egypten, Arabien, und Abysinien [= Egypt, Arabia, Ethiopia]; restricted to Abyssinia by Mertens (1967).
DISTRIBUTION. Arabian Peninsula, shores of the Red Sea, Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan.
DISTRIBUTION IN IRAN. Fig. 46 View FIGURES 44–49. 44 . Coastal areas by the Persian Gulf in Hormozgan and Sistan and Baluchistan Prov. including Qeshm and Larak islands; the Mesopotamian Plain and probably also Qazvin Prov. Its occurrence in Iran was first indicated by Moravec & Böhme (1997) and confirmed by Bauer et al. (2006).
HABITAT. Usually found near human settlements, on walls of abandoned as well as inhabited buildings, under wooden and rocky debris.
REMARKS. There has been an ongoing discrepancy regarding the presence of H. turcicus in Iran. Hemidactylus turcicus was for long believed to occupy large territory from the western Mediterranean across the Arabian Peninsula and Mesopotamian Plain to Iran and Pakistan, until H. robustus was revalidated as a full species ( Lanza 1990; Moravec & Böhme 1997) and the eastern parts of the formerly large range were assigned to the latter species. Morphologically these two species are very similar and can be easily confused. However, they are not closely related. Hemidactylus robustus belongs to a species group with mostly S Arabian distribution whereas H. turcicus is a member of a species group of Levant origin ( Moravec et al. 2011; Šmíd et al. 2013a). Based on the latest summarization of the distribution of both species ( Sindaco & Jeremčenko 2008) we believe that the records of H. turcicus from Iran should be referred to as H. robustus , although we have not seen the material. Also, recent records of H. turcicus from Iran ( Werner 2006; Gholamifard & Rastegar-Pouyani 2011) are more likely misidentified specimens of H. robustus (see Fig. 2 View FIGURES 2–7. 2 in Gholamifard & Rastegar-Pouyani, 2011). Therefore all specimens determined in the source reference as H. turcicus are depicted in the map of H. robustus in Fig. 46 View FIGURES 44–49. 44 as dubious records. A single remote record from Turkmenistan by Obst (1984) was rejected as an accidentally imported specimen or museum error ( Szczerbak & Golubev 1996). Peculiar remain also two animals collected near Qazvin by Guibé (1957) which are, however, also considered only accidental introductions along caravan routes ( Anderson 1999).
REFERENCES. Moravec & Böhme (1997); Anderson (1999); Bauer et al. (2006); Gholamifard & Rastegar-Pouyani (2011); Šmíd et al. (2013a, b).
Anderson, S. C. (1999) The lizards of Iran. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, Oxford, Ohio, 442 pp.
Bauer, A. M., Jackman, T., Greenbaum, E. & Papenfuss, T. J. (2006) Confirmation of the occurrence of Hemidactylus robustus Heyden, 1827 (Reptilia: Gekkonidae) in Iran and Pakistan. Zoology in the Middle East, 39, 59 - 62. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 09397140.2006.10638182
Gholamifard, A. & Rastegar-Pouyani, N. (2011) Distribution of Hemidactylus geckos (Reptilia: Gekkonidae) in Fars Province, Southern Iran. Amphibian and Reptile Conservation, 5, 1 - 5.
Guibe, J. (1957) Reptiles d'Iran recoltes par M. Francis Petter. Description d'un viperide nouveau: Pseudocerastes latirostris, n. sp. Bulletin du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, 29, 136 - 143.
Heyden, C. H. G. (1827) Reptilien. In: Ruppell, E. (Ed.), Atlas zu der Reise im nordlichen Africa von Eduard Ruppell. Heinrich Ludwig Bronner, Frankfurt am Main, pp. 1 - 24.
Lanza, B. (1990) Amphibians and reptiles of the Somali Democratic Republic: check list and biogeography. Biogeographia, 14, 407 - 465.
Mertens, R. (1967) Die herpetologische Sektion des Natur-Museums und Forschungs-Institutes Senckenberg in Frankfurt a. M. nebst einem Verzeichnis ihrer Typen. Senckenbergiana Biologica, 48, 1 - 106.
Moravec, J. & Bohme, W. (1997) A new subspecies of the Mediterranean gecko, Hemidactylus turcicus from the Syrian lava desert. Herpetozoa, 10, 121 - 128.
Moravec, J., Kratochvil, L., Amr, Z. S., Jandzik, D., Smid, J. & Gvozdik, V. (2011) High genetic differentiation within the Hemidactylus turcicus complex (Reptilia: Gekkonidae) in the Levant, with comments on the phylogeny and systematics of the genus. Zootaxa, 2894, 21 - 38.
Obst, F. J. (1984) A record of the gecko Hemidactylus turcicus in Turkmenia [in Russian]. Trudy Zoologicheskogo Instituta, 124, 142 - 143.
Sindaco, R. & Jeremcenko, V. K. (2008) The reptiles of the Western Palearctic. 1. Annotated checklist and distributional atlas of the turtles, crocodiles, amphisbaenians and lizards of Europe, North Africa, Middle East and Central Asia. Monografie della Societas Herpetologica Italica, Edizioni Belvedere, 579 pp.
Smid, J., Carranza, S., Kratochvil, L., Gvozdik, V., Nasher, A. K. & Moravec, J. (2013 a) Out of Arabia: A Complex Biogeographic History of Multiple Vicariance and Dispersal Events in the Gecko Genus Hemidactylus (Reptilia: Gekkonidae). PLoS ONE, 8, e 64018. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1371 / journal. pone. 0064018
Szczerbak, N. N. & Golubev, M. L. (1996) Gecko fauna of the USSR and contiguous regions. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, Oxfor, Ohio, 233 pp.
Werner, Y. L. (2006) Retraction of Ptyodactylus Goldfuss from the fauna of Iran and its replacement by a new species of Asaccus Dixon and Anderson (Reptilia: Sauria: Gekkonidae). Hamadryad, 30, 135 - 140.
FIGURES 44–49. 44. Hemidactylus flaviviridis. 45. Hemidactylus persicus. 46. Hemidactylus robustus. Question marks indicate dubious data or specimens determined as H. turcicus. 47. Hemidactylus romeshkanicus. 48. Mediodactylus aspratilis. 49. Mediodactylus heterocercum.
FIGURES 2–7. 2. Provinces of Iran with their capitals. Names of provinces are in bold, capitals in plain. 3. Major geographic features of Iran and neighbouring countries. 4. Geographic distribution of all presence records assembled for this work. 5. All records mapped on a 0.25° × 0.25° grid. 6. Calotes versicolor. 7. Laudakia caucasia.
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.
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