21 research outputs found

    Distribution of two species of Curly-tailed Lizards, genus Leiocephalus, in a metropolitan park, and the rediscovery of a nominate subspecies

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    Two Hispaniolan endemic species of lizards in the genus Leiocephalus (L. lunatus Cochran 1934 and L. personatus Cope 1862) are parapatric in an urban park in Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic. In the course of this study, we unexpectedly rediscovered the long-overlooked nominate subspecies of Leiocephalus lunatus 1 km inland from the vicinity of the type locality as what appears to be a relict population. Two congeners in the same urban setting within their natural ranges is an uncommon scenario. We provide detailed distributional data for both species within the Parque Mirador del Sur, and also report surviving populations of L. l. lunatus west of its type locality

    A remarkable new snake of the genus Tropidophis (Squamata: Tropidophiidae) from southern Hispaniola

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    A new species of Tropidophis is described from the dry forest of the Barahona Peninsula, southwestern Dominican Republic, on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. There, the new species is parapatric with T. haetianus, the only previously known Tropidophis on Hispaniola, but exhibits striking differences in scalation (much higher number of ventral scales), in other structural morphological traits (head and body proportions), and in dorsal and ventral coloration and pattern (e.g., fewer spot rows, and a patternless head and venter, etc.). The locality of this new species lies within an area where other vertebrate species have been recently discovered, underscoring the growing appreciation of the Barahona Peninsula as a diversity hotspot. Yet, this region also remains poorly studied and it is also highly imperiled due to ongoing anthropogenic change, justifying more conservation efforts
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