Ichnotropis capensis (Smith, 1838)

Baptista, Ninda L., António, Telmo & Branch, William R., 2019, The herpetofauna of Bicuar National Park and surroundings, southwestern Angola: a preliminary checklist, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 203) 13 (2), pp. 96-130 : 115

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13238919

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7E2D87A6-FF9F-FFCF-D58A-FBC54AC6F84E

treatment provided by

Felipe (2024-07-03 21:20:31, last updated 2024-08-06 15:10:44)

scientific name

Ichnotropis capensis (Smith, 1838)
status

 

Ichnotropis capensis (Smith, 1838) View in CoL

Cape Rough-scaled Lizard ( Fig. 20A–B View Fig )

Material: NB771 (34); NB772 (34); NB779 (12); photographic record (M. Finckh, site 43).

Comment: Ichnotropis capensis and I. bivittata are known to occur sympatrically in Angola ( Laurent 1964; Marques et al. 2018), and five taxa within this genus are listed for Angola ( Marques et al. 2018; Branch et al. 2019c). The systematics of the genus Ichnotropis is poorly established ( Laurent 1964), and while there is no recent systematic revision of the group ( Edwards et al. 2013), a thorough historical revision was recently published ( Berg 2017). According to this, two subspecies of I. capensis occur in Angola, I. c. capensis (Smith, 1838) and I. c. overlaeti Witte and Laurent, 1942, with the latter being restricted to northern Angola ( Marques et al. 2018). Rough-scaled lizards have recently been collected in BNP and were referred to Ichnotropis bivittata pallida Laurent, 1964 ( Butler et al. 2019), but we have regarded them as I. capensis , given that I. b. pallida is morphologically distinct, and occurs in higher altitudes, such as Humpata ( Laurent 1964). Specimens from BNP have a bright orange/red lateral line that is more evident in males than in females, and living males have a bright yellow chin and chest ( Fig. 20A–B View Fig ) that becomes bleached when preserved. Detailed and comprehensive studies of species within this genus in Angola are needed.

Berg MP van den. 2017. An annotated bibliographic history of Ichnotropis Peters, 1854 (Reptilia, Lacertidae) with remarks on the validity of some of the including species. L @ CERTIDAE (Eidechsen Online) 2017 (4): 60 - 138.

Branch WR, Vaz Pinto P, Baptista N, Conradie W. 2019 c. The reptiles of Angola - history, updated checklists, endemism, hot spots, and future directions for research. Pp. 283 - 344 In: Biodiversity of Angola. Science and Conservation: A Modern Synthesis. Editors, Huntley BJ, Russo V, Lages F, Ferrand N. Springer, Cham, Switzerland. 549 p.

Butler BO, Ceriaco LPM, Marques MP, Bandeira S, Julio T, Heinicke MP, Bauer AM. 2019. Herpetological survey of Huila Province, southwest Angola, including first records from Bicuar National Park. Herpetological Review 50 (2): 225 - 240.

Edwards S, Branch WR, Vanhooydonck B, Herrel A, Measey JG, Tolley KA. 2013. Taxonomic adjustments in the systematics of the southern African lacertid lizards (Sauria: Lacertidae). Zootaxa 3669 (2): 101 - 114.

Laurent RF. 1964. Reptiles et amphibiens de l'Angola (Troiseme contribution). Publicacoes Culturais da Companhia de Diamantes de Angola 67: 1 - 165.

Marques MP, Ceriaco LMP, Blackburn DC, Bauer AM. 2018. Diversity and distribution of the amphibians and terrestrial reptiles of Angola: atlas of historical and bibliographic records (1840 - 2017). Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 65 (Supplement II): 1 - 501.

Gallery Image

Fig. 20. Ichnotropis capensis, BNP. (A) Female; (B) male.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Squamata

Family

Lacertidae

Genus

Ichnotropis