Microgecko tanishpaensis Masroor & Khisroon & Khan & Jablonski 2020, sp. nov.

Microgecko tanishpaensis sp. nov. Figs. 2–4, Tab. 1 Recommended vernacular name: Tanishpa’s dwarf gecko Pashto name: Holotype. Pakistan Museum of Natural History (PMNH) 4023, an adult female, collected from Tanishpa, Torghar, Killa Saifullah district, Balochistan, Pakistan (31.19º N, 68.47º E), elev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Masroor, Rafaqat, Khisroon, Muhammad, Khan, Muazzam Ali, Jablonski, Daniel
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3853005
https://zenodo.org/record/3853005
Description
Summary:Microgecko tanishpaensis sp. nov. Figs. 2–4, Tab. 1 Recommended vernacular name: Tanishpa’s dwarf gecko Pashto name: Holotype. Pakistan Museum of Natural History (PMNH) 4023, an adult female, collected from Tanishpa, Torghar, Killa Saifullah district, Balochistan, Pakistan (31.19º N, 68.47º E), elevation 2378 m a.s.l., 3 September, 2018, leg. Ibad-ur-Rehman (Figs. 2, 4A,E, 5A,B). Paratypes. All the paratypes were collected from the same locality as the holotype. PMNH 3695 is adult male, 27 March, 2017, leg. Muazzam Ali Khan. PMNH 4024, adult male and PMNH 4025, a subadult, 27 August, 2018, leg. Iqbal Sher (Figs. 3, 4 B–D,F, 5C,D). Diagnosis. A large Microgecko (to at least 43.8 mm SVL) characterized by flattened head, body and tail, five scales bordering the nostril, internasal (supranasal) scales in contact with nostril and separated from each other, two pairs of postmentals, 76–84 scales around midbody, 144–156 ventral scales from the postmental to vent, 75–86 scales along dorsal midline from axilla to groin and six precloacal pores in adult male. Description of holotype. An adult female with a regenerated tail (Fig. 2A,B); neck distinct; scales of top and sides of head slightly elevated, juxtaposed, smooth, somewhat irregular in size, those of loreal region larger than those on upper sides of head and occiput (Fig. 2C), 30 across head in interorbital area counting the ciliary scales, 6 scales exclusively on interorbital bone; rostral pentagonal, wider than high with distinct median furrow, its width slightly less than twice its height; nostril between rostral, first supralabial and three nasals, area behind the nasals depressed; infranasal in contact with first supralabial; internasals (supranasals) differentiated from the surrounding scales, in contact with nostrils, separated from each other by a scale; post-supranasals smaller than internasals, separated by a pair of scales; pupil vertical, edges serrate; ear opening smaller than pupil; 11 supralabials, the first 6 anterior to eye, 7 th supralabial in contact with granules surrounding the eyes, the rest below the orbit small, the last one barely differentiated from the adjacent scales (Fig. 4A); 8 infralabials, decreasing in size posteriorly; scales on snout almost equal, larger than those on back of head; mental somewhat triangular, with round rear edge; one pair of well-developed postmentals, a smaller second pair could be differentiated, the first pair separated in midline by mental as well as by four gular scales; first pair of postmentals about half the size of mental, in contact with first infralabial; the second, smaller postmental pair less than half the size of the first pair, not in contact with infralabials (Figs. 2D, 5B); 72 gulars, flat, juxtaposed, hexagonal to polygonal, smaller than dorsals, ventral and upper head scales, not uniform in size, those on throat region are larger and subimbricate. Scales on dorsum somewhat rhomboid to irregular in shape, smooth, subimbricate, 50 across middorsum, smaller than ventrals, 78 in midline between axilla and groin, laterals little smaller than middorsals; ventrals smooth, imbricate, rhomboid, those on abdominal region are larger than those on throat, 32 across midbelly, 156 from behind the apex of mental to anterior margin of cloaca; scales of limbs and tail subimbricate, arranged more or less in rows or annuli, those on limbs similar to dorsals; adpressed forelimb reaches between eyes and snout, adpressed hindlimbs not reaching to axilla; digits angularly bent between three distal phalanges and proximal portion of the digits; subdigital lamellae under fingers and toes smooth, keel-like structures between ultimate and antepenultimate phalanges appeared as a result of desiccation of this specimen (Fig. 4E); 14 subdigital lamellae on 4 th finger, 12 under 1 st toe, 17 under 3 rd toe and 19 under 4 th toe, terminal portion of toes compressed; the regenerated tail covered above and below by smooth, rhomboid, flat, slightly imbricate scales, distinctly larger than those of dorsum and about equal in size to the ventrals, arranged in regular transverse series; precloacal region slightly damaged, six enlarged scales anterior to vent midway between insertion of limbs; tail length 35 mm, of which more than 90% is regenerated. Measurements of holotype. Snout-vent length 43.8 mm, tail length 35.0 mm (regenerated tail), head length from tip of snout to the anterior edge of ear 11.3 mm, head width 8.0 mm, head height 3.0 mm, forelimb length 11.0 mm, hindlimb length 14.8 mm, trunk length 20.7 mm (see Table 3 for detailed measurements and meristic counts). Coloration. Live specimens have saffron yellow color above, ventral surfaces dusty to cream; a chocolatecolored band from snout through eye, ears and meeting with a nuchal band; a short brownish bar on occiput; three transverse bands on dorsum between axilla and groin, the interspace between them about more than two times the width of narrow bands, another fairly small brownish spot midway between insertion of hindlimbs. Body coloration and pattern of the three paratypes (Fig. 3: PMNH 3695, 4024 & 4025) almost exactly as the holotype. Description of paratypes: The paratypes do not differ significantly from the holotype in coloration and pattern except as follows: PMNH 3695, an adult male with a regenerated tail, a desiccated and slightly damaged specimen with six well-developed precloacal pores in three-space-three configuration, separated by a scale (Fig. 3C, 4C), 10 supralabials, three scales separating the first pair of postmentals; PMNH 4024 is an adult male having six large precloacal scales bearing pits in a continuous series (Fig. 3A, 4B,D), a single scale separating the supranasals, the first pair of posmentals marginally separated by a single scale, the second pair of postmentals about half the size of the first pair, in contact with first supralabials (Figs. 5C); PMNH 4025 is a subadult with a complete original tail, a single scale separating the supranasals, the second pair of postmentals about half the size of the first pair, five crossbars on tail, width of crossbars less than half the width of the interspaces. Detailed data including metric, meristic and qualitative characters of holotype and paratypes is provided in Table 1. Etymology: The species is named after the region where the holotype was collected: Tanishpa village in the valley of the same name, Torghar Mts., Killa Saifulla District, Balochistan Province, Pakistan, by adding the Latin “-ensis” meaning ‘from’ or ‘belonging to’. Habitat and ecology: The type locality, Tanishpa, is a small village situated in the Torghar Mountains (meaning “Black Mountains”) in the Toba Kakar Range, a southern offshoot of the Himalayas, ca. 60 km from the border with Afghanistan (Fig. 1). The Torghar Mountains are very rugged semi-arid sandstone ridges with an average elevation of 2400 m and is approximately 90 km long and vary from 15 to 30 km in width. This region is characterized by having dry temperate ecology, with sparse vegetation (Fig. 6). The climate of the area is dry, with cold winters (an average mean temperature of 4°C) and warm summers (an average mean temperature 26 °C). Heavy snow often falls in winter and violent thunderstorms and dust storms occur in summer. The area receives very little precipitation with a recorded annual total between 180 mm and 270 mm (Planning and Development Department of Government of Balochistan, 2011). Occasional drought cycles are experienced which severely affect the flora and fauna of the region (Raja 2000). Shrub-steppe plant communities dominate the semi-desert landscape of the Torghar Hills. Bunchgrasses, forbs, Ephedra sp., Artemisia sp., and other shrubs occur on the upland slopes. Cargana ambigua and Tamarix sp. grows in low lying areas and streambeds where water is available. Trees are scarce, yet wild olive ( Olea europea cuspidata ), juniper ( Juniperus excels ), wild pistachio ( Pistacia khinjuk ), almond ( Prunus brahuica ) and ash ( Fraxinus xanthoxyloides ) are scattered across the lower slopes, and orchards are cultivated where water is sufficiently available. Overgrazing of the valleys has led to the establishment of xerophytic scrub vegetation dominated by Acacia, Artemisia, Haloxylon, and Rosa species (Frisina et al. 1998, 2002). Mammals including Capra falconeri megaceros , Ovis orientalis cycloceros, Canis lupus, Otocolobus manul, Felis silvestris ornata , Hyaena hyaena , Vulpes vulpes, Martes foina , and number of small species, such as Ochotona rufescens and Ellobius fuscocapillus and over 78 bird species have been reported from the area. The area is rich in reptiles, including the endemic taxa Laudakia melanura nasiri and Cyrtopodion rhodocauda . Other recorded species recorded in the vicinity of the type locality were: Testudo horsfieldii , Cyrtopodion watsoni , Hemidactylus persicus , Phrynocephalus scutellatus, Ablepharus pannonicus , Eremias persica , Laudakia microlepis , Trapelus agilis, Platyceps rhodorachis , Psammophis schokari, Ptyas mucosa, Macrovipera lebetina obtusa , and Pseudocerastes persicus (Woodford et al. 2004). All specimens were collected soon after dusk at about 20h00, suggesting that the species is possibly nocturnal as other species of the genus Microgecko . Specimens were caught away from the human settlements in open landscape along the dry streambed on large sandstones in the months of March and September revealing that the species activities may at least extend over this period. Such large sandstones are used by these geckos as shelter against adverse environmental conditions during periods of inactivity or hibernation. During collection, the specimens moved on the ground or climbed with great agility. Collection of only four specimens during 40 days of survey in 2017 and 2018 suggests that this is a rare, or at least rarely encountered, species. The type locality is characterized by herbaceous cover and occasional shrubs and wild olive trees. Comparison with other species of Microgecko : Microgecko tanishpaensis sp. nov. superficially resembles M. depressus but differs from it in the following characters: larger size, five scales in contact with nostril including first supralabial, rostral and three nasals ( versus four in M. depressus including first supralabial, rostral and two nasals; Fig. 5A), supranasals and postsupranasals differentiated from the surrounding scales ( versus not differentiated); supranasal in contact with nostril ( versus not in contact; Fig. 5A), separated from each other by a scale ( versus in contact), rostral pentagonal ( versus quadarangular), six supralabials anterior to eye, the rest below the orbit but separated from the eye by granules ( versus 4 to 5), 10–11 supralabials ( versus 8–10), 144–156 GVA ( versus 129–139), 76–84 scales around midbody ( versus 74–76), two pairs of postmentals ( versus absent or one small pair; Fig. 5B), three dark brown transverse bands on the back ( versus 3–5), five transverse bands on tail ( versus 6) and six precloacal pores in males ( versus 2–5). Microgecko h. helenae Nikolsky and M. h. fasciatus Schmidtler & Schmidtler, both very distantly distributed in Iran, can be easily differentiated from M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. by the following combination of characters: 5–8 supralabials ( versus 10–11), three supralabials reach the front edge of orbit ( versus 6), one pair of postmentals ( versus 2), supranasals and postsupranasals in contact or partly separated ( versus always separated in M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. ), 11–15 subdigital lamellae on 4 th toe ( versus 17–19), 101–126 GVA ( versus 144–156), 60–75 scales across midbody ( versus 76–84), none or 5–7 dorsal crossbars on back edged with white color in the rear ( versus 3 crossbars with no white edges) and none or 7–12 crossbars on tail ( versus 5). Except for M. persicus bakhtiari Minton, Anderson & Anderson, the other two subspecies of Persian dwarf gecko M. persicus differ from M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. in having a dorsal color pattern of crossbars with posterior white margins. From the nominate subspecies M. p. persicus (Nikolsky), our new species can be distinguished by the following set of characters: 10–11 supralabials ( versus 7–10), 27–30 interorbital scales ( versus 16–22), 17–19 subdigital lamellae on 4 th toe ( versus 13–16), 144–156 GVA ( versus 117–130), 3 crossbars with no white edges ( versus none or 5 dorsal crossbars on back edged posteriorly with white) and 5 crossbars on tail ( versus 8–9). From M. p. bakhtiari , our new species M. tanishpaensis can be differentiated as follows: 27–30 interorbital scales ( versus 18–22), 17–19 subdigital lamellae on 4 th toe ( versus 12–16), 75–86 AGS ( versus 57–71), 144–156 GVA ( versus 113), 3 crossbars on back ( versus 4–5), width of crossbars on back and tail less than half of interspaces ( versus width of dorsal and caudal crossbars more than the width of interspaces), 5 crossbars on tail ( versus 9–10). The eastern subspecies M. p. euphorbiacola Minton, Anderson & Anderson, can be distinguished from M. tanishpaensis sp. nov . by the following characters: first pair of postmentals mainly separated ( versus the first pair of postmentals in broad contact), 27–30 interorbital scales ( versus 15–20), 17–19 subdigital lamellae on 4 th toe ( versus 11–16), 144–156 GVA ( versus 111–130), 76–84 scales across midbody ( versus 66–77), 75–86 AGS ( versus 62–76), 3 dorsal crossbars on back ( versus 4–5), width of dorsal crossbars less than half of interspaces ( versus more than half or equal to width of interspaces) and 5 crossbars on tail ( versus 6–8). Microgecko latifi Leviton & Anderson, known from its holotype, four unvouchered specimens (Anderson 1999) and two recently examined specimens (Torki 2020), can be recognized by having four scales bordering the nostril ( versus 5 in M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. ), no postmental scale pairs ( versus 2 pairs), fewer supralabials (6–7 versus 10–11), infralabials (5 versus 8), interorbitals (16–19 versus 27–30), subdigital lamellae on 4 th toe (13–14 versus 17–19), scales around midbody (72 versus 76–84) and GVA (120 versus 144–156). The recently described M. chabaharensis Gholamifard, Rastegar-Pouyani, Rastegar-Pouyani, Khosravani, Yousefkhani & Oraei and M. varaviensis Gholamifard, Rastegar-Pouyani & Rastegar-Pouyani, can be distinguished from the M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. by exhibiting no dorsal transverse bar or having such bars indistinct. In M. varaviensis , the nostril is bordered by four scales and bears a single pair of postmentals, contrary to M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. which possesses five scales bordering nostril and two large pairs of postmentals. From M. laki , M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. can be distinguished by having 6 precloacal pores in males ( versus none), nostrils separated from each other ( versus in contact), two pairs of postmentals ( versus one), dorsal dark crossbars without posterior white margins ( versus white margins present) and higher numbers of supralabials, infralabials, interorbital scales, AGS and GVA. For additional comparison of M. tanishpaensis sp. nov. with its congeners, see Table 2. : Published as part of Masroor, Rafaqat, Khisroon, Muhammad, Khan, Muazzam Ali & Jablonski, Daniel, 2020, A new species of Microgecko Nikolsky, 1907 (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from Pakistan, pp. 147-164 in Zootaxa 4780 (1) on pages 149-157, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4780.1.7, http://zenodo.org/record/3839638 : {"references": ["Planning and Development Department of Government of Balochistan (2011). District development profile-Killa Saifullah. Prepared by Planning & Development Department, Governmentof Balochistan, Quetta in collaboration with United Nations Children's Fund Provincial Office Balochistan, Quetta, 117 pp. Available from: http: // www. ndma. gov. pk / Publications / Development % 20 Profile % 20 District % 20 Killa % 20 Saifullah. pdf (Accessed 21 May 2020)", "Raja, N. A. (2000) Drought in Torghar. 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R. & Awan, G. A. (2004) The Torghar Conservation Project: management of the livestock, Suleiman markhor (Capra falconeri) and Afghan urial (Ovis orientalis) in the Torghar hills, Pakistan. Game and Wildlife Science, 21 (3), 177 - 187.", "Minton, S. A., Anderson, S. C. & Anderson, J. A (1970) Remarks on some geckos from southwest Asia, with descriptions of three new forms and a key to the genus Tropiocolotes. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 37, 333 - 362.", "Anderson, S. C. (1999) The Lizards of Iran. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, Oxford, Ohio, 442 pp.", "Torki, F. (2020) A new species of dwarf gecko of the genus Microgecko (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from Iran. Sauria, 42 (1), 41 - 54."]}