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  • The Knight and the King: two new species of giant benttoed gecko (Cyrtodactylus, Gekkonidae, Squamata) from northern New Guinea, with comments on endemism in the North Papuan Mountains

    Author(s)
    Oliver, Paul M
    Richards, Stephen T
    Mumpuni
    Roesler, Herbert
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Oliver, Paul M.
    Year published
    2016
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    The diverse biota of New Guinea includes many nominally widespread species that actually comprise multiple deeply divergent lineages with more localised histories of evolution. Here we investigate the systematics of the very large geckos of the Cyrtodactylus novaeguineae complex using molecular and morphological data. These data reveal two widespread and divergent lineages that can be distinguished from each other, and from type material of Cyrtodactylus novaeguineae, by aspects of size, build, coloration and male scalation. On the basis of these differences we describe two new species. Both have wide distributions that ...
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    The diverse biota of New Guinea includes many nominally widespread species that actually comprise multiple deeply divergent lineages with more localised histories of evolution. Here we investigate the systematics of the very large geckos of the Cyrtodactylus novaeguineae complex using molecular and morphological data. These data reveal two widespread and divergent lineages that can be distinguished from each other, and from type material of Cyrtodactylus novaeguineae, by aspects of size, build, coloration and male scalation. On the basis of these differences we describe two new species. Both have wide distributions that overlap extensively in the foothill forests of the North Papuan Mountains, however one is seemingly restricted to hill and lower montane forests on the ranges themselves, while the other is more widespread throughout the surrounding lowlands. The taxon endemic to the North Papuan Mountains is related to an apparently lowland form currently known only from Waigeo and Batanta Island far to the west – hinting at a history on island arcs that accreted to form the North Papuan Mountains.
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    Journal Title
    Zookeys
    Volume
    2016
    Issue
    562
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.562.6052
    Subject
    Evolutionary biology
    Zoology
    Science & Technology
    Life Sciences & Biomedicine
    Arc accretion
    Endemism
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/411158
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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