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Curly-tailed lizard

Leiocephalidae, also known as the curlytail lizards or curly-tailed lizards, is a family of iguanian lizards restricted to the West Indies. One of the defining features of these lizards is that their tail often curls over. They were previously regarded as members of the subfamily Leiocephalinae within the family Tropiduridae. There are presently 30 known species, all in the genus Leiocephalus.

Curly-tailed lizard
Leiocephalus carinatus
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Iguania
Clade: Pleurodonta
Family: Leiocephalidae
Frost & Etheridge, 1989
Genus: Leiocephalus
Gray, 1827[1]

Taxonomy Edit

Phylogenetic evidence supports Leiocephalidae being the most basal extant member of the clade Pleurodonta, with it diverging from the rest of the suborder as early as the Late Cretaceous, about 91 million years ago.[2] As with many other higher-order taxa endemic to the Caribbean, it likely colonized the Antilles from South America during the Cenozoic; however, its deep divergence time from other lizards supports a much more complex and less straightforward history in the West Indies compared to other modern taxa.[3]

Phylogenetic analysis on the genus supports some members of the now-extinct Lesser Antillean Leiocephalus radiation being the most basal of the recent Leiocephalus, with the last-surviving members of this group, L. herminieri and L. roquetus, sharing traits not present in other curlytail lizards from the Greater Antilles and other areas, such as the absence of enlarged snout scales. The second most basal of the recent curlytail lizards is another recently extinct species, L. eremitus from Navassa, followed by all other members of the genus from the Bahamas and Greater Antilles. Another extinct species from the Lesser Antilles known only from fossil remains, L. cuneus of Antigua and Barbuda, is thought to be more closely related to more derived Leiocephalus from the Bahamas and Greater Antilles, such as L. carinatus, L. greenwayi and L. punctatus, than to the other, more basal Lesser Antillean and Navassa species.[3]

Distribution Edit

Curlytail lizards are native to the West Indies, with the extant (living) species in the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic) and nearby small islands.[4][5] Additionally, Leiocephalus carinatus and Leiocephalus schreibersii have been introduced to Florida.[6]

Former distribution Edit

Curlytail lizards formerly had a much wider native range, being distributed south to Jamaica and east to Puerto Rico and several of the Lesser Antilles.[7] They went extinct in most of this range during the Quaternary extinction or Holocene extinction, with some members of the Lesser Antillean radiation surviving to recent times, perhaps remaining widespread until after European colonization. The last surviving members of the Lesser Antillean radiation, L. herminieri of Guadeloupe and L. roquetus of Martinique, went extinct during the early-mid 19th century.[3]

General anatomy Edit

The curly-tailed lizards vary in size depending on species, but typically are approximately 9 cm (3.5 in) in snout-to-vent length. These lizards have no femoral pores, pterygoid teeth, or palatine teeth. Additionally, these lizards are observed to have overlapping scales.[4]

Behavior Edit

The curly-tailed lizards mostly forage on arthropods such as insects, but also commonly take flowers and fruits.[4][8] Large individuals will eat small vertebrates, including anoles.[8][9]

As suggested by their name, most species of this family often lift their tail and curl it. This is done both when a potential predator is present and when not present, although in some curly-tailed lizard species it increases when a predator is present. It shows the fitness of the lizard to a would-be predator and—in the case of an attack—draws attention to the tail, which increases the lizard's chance of escaping.[10][11] Although it has been suggested that it also functions as a territorial display,[6] studies have been unable to find support for this, as the tail curling does not vary when another member of the same species is present.[11]

Conservation status and extinctions Edit

The conservation status of the species in this family varies greatly. Several species, for example Leiocephalus carinatus, are common and widespread. Others are rare and highly threatened, especially those restricted to a single small island or a single location on a larger island, like the critically endangered Leiocephalus (barahonensis) altavelensis from Alto Velo Island and critically endangered Leiocephalus onaneyi from Guantánamo Province in Cuba.[5] Primary threats to their survival are habitat loss (for example, expanding agriculture, charcoal production and grazing goats) and introduced predators (for example, small Indian mongoose).[12][13][14]

Several species of Leiocephalus are already extinct, including all of the Jamaican, Puerto Rican and Lesser Antillean members of the genus.[7][15] Some of these are only known from fossil or subfossil remains and became extinct in the Pleistocene or pre-Columbian era, but others such as two Lesser Antillean species and one from Navassa survived until comparatively recently, during the 19th century. Leiocephalus is the only known squamate genus to be entirely wiped out from the Lesser Antilles following European colonization; other reptilian genera that have also seen significant extirpations in the Lesser Antilles, such as Boa or Diploglossus, still retain relict populations on at least some islands, such as Dominica and Montserrat. This mass disappearance of Leiocephalus from the Lesser Antilles may be due to their inhabiting dry forests in littoral areas that were heavily exploited and deforested by early colonists. Few confirmed Leiocephalus fossil remains from after the early Holocene are known from the Lesser Antilles, which has raised doubts about their being only recently extirpated from this area; however, Leiocephalus fossil bones are small and closely resemble those of other lizard species, which may explain the lack of detection of Leiocephalus fossil bones from these areas aside from by the most highly trained palaeo-herpetologists.[3]

In modern times, three species, Leiocephalus endomychus, Leiocephalus pratensis and Leiocephalus rhutidira, have not been seen since the 1960s and 1970s and are recognized as critically endangered, possibly extinct, by the IUCN. They are among the "most wanted" EDGE species.[13][14][16]

Newly discovered species Edit

Lizards of this family are diurnal and mostly inhabit fairly open habitats in a generally well-studied part of the world. Consequently, the majority of the species and subspecies already were scientifically described several decades ago. In 2016, the first new curly-tailed lizard since the early 1980s was described. The species was found in the coastal dunes of Bahía de las Calderas in the southwestern Dominican Republic. This species differs from the rest within Leiocephalidae in that its bony parietal table is U-shaped versus V-shaped, the males have 3–4 enlarged post-postcloacal scales versus 2, and there are specific sexual dimorphism trails.[17]

Species and subspecies Edit

The following species and subspecies, listed alphabetically by scientific name, are recognized as being valid by the Reptile Database.[18]

Extant and recently extinct species Edit

Image Scientific name Common Name Subspecies Distribution
Leiocephalus barahonensis Schmidt, 1921 orange-bellied curlytail
  • L. b. altavelensis Noble & Hassler, 1933Alto Velo curly-tailed lizard, Alto Velo curlytail (likely better regarded as a separate species)[19][20]
  • L. b. aureus Cochran, 1934
  • L. b. barahonensis Schmidt, 1921
  • L. b. beatanus Noble, 1923
  • L. b. oxygaster A. Schwartz, 1967
Hispaniola
  Leiocephalus carinatus Gray, 1827 saw-scaled curlytail, northern curly-tailed lizard
  • L. c. carinatus Gray, 1827
  • L. c. aquarius Schwartz & Ogren, 1956
  • L. c. armouri Barbour & Shreve, 1935
  • L. c. cayensis Schwartz, 1959
  • L. c. coryi K.P. Schmidt, 1936
  • L. c. granti Rabb, 1957
  • L. c. hodsdoni K.P. Schmidt, 1936
  • L. c. labrossytus Schwartz, 1959, South Central Cuba, Playa Larga
  • L. c. microcyon Schwartz, 1959
  • L. c. mogotensis Schwartz, 1959
  • L. c. virescens Stejneger, 1901
  • L. c. zayasi Schwartz, 1959
Bahama Islands, the Cayman Islands and Cuba
  Leiocephalus cubensis (Gray, 1840) Cuban brown curlytail, Cuban curlytail lizard
  • L. c. cubensis (Gray, 1840)
  • L. c. gigas A. Schwartz, 1959
  • L. c. minor Varona & Garrido, 1970
  • L. c. pambasileus A. Schwartz, 1959
  • L. c. paraphrus A. Schwartz, 1959
Cuba.
Leiocephalus endomychus A. Schwartz, 1967 Hinche curlytail, Central Haitian curlytail (possibly extinct, last seen in 1976) Haiti
Leiocephalus eremitus (Cope, 1868) Navassa curlytail lizard (extinct, 19th century) Navassa Island
Leiocephalus greenwayi Barbour & Shreve, 1935 East Plana curlytail, Plana Cay curlytail lizard Bahama Islands
Leiocephalus herminieri (A.M.C. Duméril & Bibron, 1837) Martinique curlytail lizard (extinct, 19th century) Trinidad and Tobago
Leiocephalus inaguae Cochran, 1931 Inagua curlytail lizard Bahamas
Leiocephalus loxogrammus (Cope, 1887) San Salvador curlytail, Rum Cay curlytail lizard
  • L. l. loxogrammus (Cope, 1887)
  • L. l. parnelli Barbour & Shreve, 1935
Bahamas
  Leiocephalus lunatus Cochran, 1934 Hispaniolan maskless curlytail, Santo Domingo curlytail lizard
  • L. l. arenicolor Mertens, 1939
  • L. l. lewisi A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. l. louisae Cochran, 1934
  • L. l. lunatus Cochran, 1934
  • L. l. melaenoscelis A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. l. thomasi A. Schwartz, 1967
Dominican Republic.
  Leiocephalus macropus (Cope, 1863) Cuban side-blotched curlytail, Monte Verde curlytail lizard
  • L. m. aegialus A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1967
  • L. m. asbolomus A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1967
  • L. m. felinoi Garrido, 1979
  • L. m. hoplites Zug, 1959
  • L. m. hyacinthurus Zug, 1959
  • L. m. immaculatus Hardy, 1958
  • L. m. koopmani Zug, 1959
  • L. m. lenticulatus Garrido, 1973
  • L. m. macropus (Cope, 1863)
  • L. m. phylax A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1967
  • L. m. torrei Garrido, 1979
Cuba.
  Leiocephalus melanochlorus (Cope, 1863) Tiburon curlytail, Jérémie curlytailed lizard
  • L. m. hypsistus Schwartz, 1966
  • L. m. melanochlorus (Cope, 1863)
Haiti.
Leiocephalus onaneyi Garrido, 1973 Guantanamo striped curlytail, Guantanamo striped curly-tailed lizard, Sierra curlytail lizard Cuba.
  Leiocephalus personatus (Cope, 1863) Hispaniolan masked curlytail, Haitian curlytail lizard Hispaniola.
Leiocephalus pratensis (Cochran, 1928) Haitian striped curlytail, Atalaye curlytail lizard (possibly extinct, last seen in 1966)
  • L. p. chimarus A. Schwartz, 1979
  • L. p. pratensis (Cochran, 1928)
Haiti.
  Leiocephalus psammodromus Barbour, 1920 Turks and Caicos curlytail, Bastion Cay curlytail lizard
  • L. p. aphretor A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. p. apocrinus A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. p. cacodoxus A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. p. hyphantus A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. p. mounax A. Schwartz, 1967
  • L. p. psammodromus Barbour, 1920
Turks and Caicos Islands
Leiocephalus punctatus Cochran, 1931 Crooked Acklins curlytail, spotted curlytail lizard Bahamas.
Leiocephalus raviceps (Cope, 1863) pallid curlytail, mountain curlytail lizard
  • L. r. delavarai Garrido, 1973
  • L. r. jaumei A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1968
  • L. r. kilinikowski A. Schwartz, 1960
  • L. r. raviceps (Cope, 1863)
  • L. r. uzzelli A. Schwartz, 1960
Cuba.
Leiocephalus rhutidira A. Schwartz, 1979 Haitian black-throated curlytail, Lapierre curlytail lizard (possibly extinct, last seen in 1978) Haiti.
Leiocephalus roquetus Bochaton, Charles, and Lenoble, 2021 La Désirade curlytail lizard, curlytail roquet (extinct, late 19th century) Guadeloupe.
  Leiocephalus schreibersii (Gravenhorst, 1838) red-sided curlytail, red-sided curly-tailed lizard
  • L. s. nesomorus A. Schwartz, 1968
  • L. s. schreibersii (Gravenhorst, 1838)
Hispaniola
Leiocephalus semilineatus Dunn, 1920 Hispaniolan pale-bellied curlytail, Thomazeau curlytail lizard, Pale-bellied Hispaniolan curlytail Hispaniola.
  Leiocephalus sixtoi Kohler, Bobadilla, & Hedges, 2016 Hispaniolan dune curlytail Hispaniola.
  Leiocephalus stictigaster A. Schwartz, 1959 Cuban striped curlytail, Cabo Corrientes curlytail lizard
  • L. s. astictus A. Schwartz, 1959
  • L. s. celeustes A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1968
  • L. s. exotheotus A. Schwartz, 1959
  • L. s. gibarensis A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1968
  • L. s. lipomator A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1968
  • L. s. lucianus A. Schwartz, 1960
  • L. s. naranjoi A. Schwartz & Garrido, 1968
  • L. s. ophiplacodes A. Schwartz, 1964
  • L. s. parasphex A. Schwartz, 1964
  • L. s. septentrionalis Garrido, 1975
  • L. s. sierrae A. Schwartz, 1959
  • L. s. stictigaster A. Schwartz, 1959
Cuba.
  Leiocephalus varius Garman, 1887 Cayman curlytail, Cayman curly-tailed lizard Cayman Islands.
Leiocephalus vinculum Cochran, 1928 Gonave curlytail, Cochran's curlytail lizard Haiti.

Fossil and subfossil species Edit

Nota bene: A binomial authority or trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species or subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Leiocephalus.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Leiocepalus ". Dahms Tierleben. www.dahmstierleben.de.
  2. ^ Zheng, Yuchi; Wiens, John J. (1 January 2016). "Combining phylogenomic and supermatrix approaches, and a time-calibrated phylogeny for squamate reptiles (lizards and snakes) based on 52 genes and 4162 species". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 94 (Pt B): 537–547. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2015.10.009. ISSN 1055-7903. PMID 26475614.
  3. ^ a b c d Bochaton, Corentin; Charles, Laurent; Lenoble, Arnaud (15 February 2021). "Historical and fossil evidence of an extinct endemic species of Leiocephalus (Squamata: Leiocephalidae) from the Guadeloupe Islands". Zootaxa. 4927 (3): 383–409. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4927.3.4. ISSN 1175-5334. PMID 33756701. S2CID 232337806.
  4. ^ a b c J., Vitt, Laurie (2014). Herpetology : an introductory biology of amphibians and reptiles. Caldwell, Janalee P. (4th ed.). Amsterdam. ISBN 9780123869197. OCLC 839312807.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b Hedges, B. "All Islands". CaribHerp. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  6. ^ a b Conant, R.; J.T. Collins (1998). A Field Guide to the Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America (3 ed.). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 244–246. ISBN 978-0395904527.
  7. ^ a b "Search results | The Reptile Database". reptile-database.reptarium.cz. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  8. ^ a b Kircher, B.L.; C.D. Robinson; M.A. Johnson (2014). "Herbivory in the Northern Curly-tailed Lizard (Leiocephalus carinatus)". Caribbean Herpetology. 50: 1–2. doi:10.31611/ch.50.
  9. ^ Steinberg; Losos; Schoener; Spiller; Kolbe; Leal (2004). "Predation-associated modulation of movement-based signals by a Bahamian lizard". PNAS. 11 (25): 9187–9192. doi:10.1073/pnas.1407190111. PMC 4078856. PMID 24843163.
  10. ^ Cooper, W.E. (2007). "Escape and its relationship to pursuit‐deterrent signaling in the Cuban curly‐tailed lizard Leiocephalus carinatus". Herpetologica. 63 (2): 144–150. doi:10.1655/0018-0831(2007)63[144:EAIRTP]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86526680.
  11. ^ a b Kircher, B.K.; M.A. Johnson (2017). "Why do curly tail lizards (genus Leiocephalus) curl their tails? An assessment of displays toward conspecifics and predators". Ethology. 123 (5): 342–347. doi:10.1111/eth.12603.
  12. ^ Fong, A. (2017). "Leiocephalus onaneyi". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T75310301A75607524. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-2.RLTS.T75310301A75607524.en.
  13. ^ a b "57. Central Haitian Curlytail". EDGE species. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  14. ^ a b "73. Lapierre Curlytail Lizard". EDGE species. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  15. ^ Meiri, S.; et al. (2017). "Extinct, obscure or imaginary: The lizard species with the smallest ranges" (PDF). Diversity and Distributions. 24 (2): 262–273. doi:10.1111/ddi.12678.
  16. ^ "75. Atalaye Curlytail Lizard". EDGE species. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  17. ^ Köhler, Gunther; Bobadilla, Marcos J. Rodríguez; Hedges, S. Blair (13 June 2016). "A new dune-dwelling lizard of the genus Leiocephalus (Iguania, Leiocephalidae) from the Dominican Republic". Zootaxa. 4121 (5): 517–32. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4121.5.2. ISSN 1175-5334. PMID 27395240. S2CID 9386834.
  18. ^ Leiocephalus at the Reptarium.cz Reptile Database. Accessed 2 July 2019.
  19. ^ Inchaustegui, S.; Landestoy, M.; Powell, R. & Hedges, B. (2017) [errata version of 2016 assessment]. "Leiocephalus altavelensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T75306189A115482003. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T75306189A75607464.en. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  20. ^ Hedges, S. Blair (2021). "Isla Alto Velo". Caribherp: Amphibians and reptiles of Caribbean Islands. Retrieved 14 September 2021.

Further reading Edit

  • Gray JE (1827). "A Description of a new Genus and some new species of Saurian Reptiles; with a Revision of the Species of Chameleons". Philosoph. Mag. Ann. Chem. Math. Astron. Nat. Hist. Gen. Sci. 2 (9): 207–214. (Leiocephalus, new genus, p. 207).
  • Schwartz A, Thomas R (1975). A Check-list of West Indian Amphibians and Reptiles. Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication No. 1. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Carnegie Museum of Natural History. 216 pp. (Leiocephalus species, L. barahonensisL. viniculum, pp. 126–140).

curly, tailed, lizard, leiocephalidae, also, known, curlytail, lizards, curly, tailed, lizards, family, iguanian, lizards, restricted, west, indies, defining, features, these, lizards, that, their, tail, often, curls, over, they, were, previously, regarded, me. Leiocephalidae also known as the curlytail lizards or curly tailed lizards is a family of iguanian lizards restricted to the West Indies One of the defining features of these lizards is that their tail often curls over They were previously regarded as members of the subfamily Leiocephalinae within the family Tropiduridae There are presently 30 known species all in the genus Leiocephalus Curly tailed lizardLeiocephalus carinatusScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaOrder SquamataSuborder IguaniaClade PleurodontaFamily LeiocephalidaeFrost amp Etheridge 1989Genus LeiocephalusGray 1827 1 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Distribution 2 1 Former distribution 3 General anatomy 4 Behavior 5 Conservation status and extinctions 6 Newly discovered species 7 Species and subspecies 7 1 Extant and recently extinct species 7 2 Fossil and subfossil species 8 References 9 Further readingTaxonomy EditPhylogenetic evidence supports Leiocephalidae being the most basal extant member of the clade Pleurodonta with it diverging from the rest of the suborder as early as the Late Cretaceous about 91 million years ago 2 As with many other higher order taxa endemic to the Caribbean it likely colonized the Antilles from South America during the Cenozoic however its deep divergence time from other lizards supports a much more complex and less straightforward history in the West Indies compared to other modern taxa 3 Phylogenetic analysis on the genus supports some members of the now extinct Lesser Antillean Leiocephalus radiation being the most basal of the recent Leiocephalus with the last surviving members of this group L herminieri and L roquetus sharing traits not present in other curlytail lizards from the Greater Antilles and other areas such as the absence of enlarged snout scales The second most basal of the recent curlytail lizards is another recently extinct species L eremitus from Navassa followed by all other members of the genus from the Bahamas and Greater Antilles Another extinct species from the Lesser Antilles known only from fossil remains L cuneus of Antigua and Barbuda is thought to be more closely related to more derived Leiocephalus from the Bahamas and Greater Antilles such as L carinatus L greenwayi and L punctatus than to the other more basal Lesser Antillean and Navassa species 3 Distribution EditCurlytail lizards are native to the West Indies with the extant living species in the Bahamas Turks and Caicos Cayman Islands Cuba Hispaniola Haiti and the Dominican Republic and nearby small islands 4 5 Additionally Leiocephalus carinatus and Leiocephalus schreibersii have been introduced to Florida 6 Former distribution Edit Curlytail lizards formerly had a much wider native range being distributed south to Jamaica and east to Puerto Rico and several of the Lesser Antilles 7 They went extinct in most of this range during the Quaternary extinction or Holocene extinction with some members of the Lesser Antillean radiation surviving to recent times perhaps remaining widespread until after European colonization The last surviving members of the Lesser Antillean radiation L herminieri of Guadeloupe and L roquetus of Martinique went extinct during the early mid 19th century 3 General anatomy EditThe curly tailed lizards vary in size depending on species but typically are approximately 9 cm 3 5 in in snout to vent length These lizards have no femoral pores pterygoid teeth or palatine teeth Additionally these lizards are observed to have overlapping scales 4 Behavior EditThe curly tailed lizards mostly forage on arthropods such as insects but also commonly take flowers and fruits 4 8 Large individuals will eat small vertebrates including anoles 8 9 As suggested by their name most species of this family often lift their tail and curl it This is done both when a potential predator is present and when not present although in some curly tailed lizard species it increases when a predator is present It shows the fitness of the lizard to a would be predator and in the case of an attack draws attention to the tail which increases the lizard s chance of escaping 10 11 Although it has been suggested that it also functions as a territorial display 6 studies have been unable to find support for this as the tail curling does not vary when another member of the same species is present 11 Conservation status and extinctions EditThe conservation status of the species in this family varies greatly Several species for example Leiocephalus carinatus are common and widespread Others are rare and highly threatened especially those restricted to a single small island or a single location on a larger island like the critically endangered Leiocephalus barahonensis altavelensis from Alto Velo Island and critically endangered Leiocephalus onaneyi from Guantanamo Province in Cuba 5 Primary threats to their survival are habitat loss for example expanding agriculture charcoal production and grazing goats and introduced predators for example small Indian mongoose 12 13 14 Several species of Leiocephalus are already extinct including all of the Jamaican Puerto Rican and Lesser Antillean members of the genus 7 15 Some of these are only known from fossil or subfossil remains and became extinct in the Pleistocene or pre Columbian era but others such as two Lesser Antillean species and one from Navassa survived until comparatively recently during the 19th century Leiocephalus is the only known squamate genus to be entirely wiped out from the Lesser Antilles following European colonization other reptilian genera that have also seen significant extirpations in the Lesser Antilles such as Boa or Diploglossus still retain relict populations on at least some islands such as Dominica and Montserrat This mass disappearance of Leiocephalus from the Lesser Antilles may be due to their inhabiting dry forests in littoral areas that were heavily exploited and deforested by early colonists Few confirmed Leiocephalus fossil remains from after the early Holocene are known from the Lesser Antilles which has raised doubts about their being only recently extirpated from this area however Leiocephalus fossil bones are small and closely resemble those of other lizard species which may explain the lack of detection of Leiocephalus fossil bones from these areas aside from by the most highly trained palaeo herpetologists 3 In modern times three species Leiocephalus endomychus Leiocephalus pratensis and Leiocephalus rhutidira have not been seen since the 1960s and 1970s and are recognized as critically endangered possibly extinct by the IUCN They are among the most wanted EDGE species 13 14 16 Newly discovered species EditLizards of this family are diurnal and mostly inhabit fairly open habitats in a generally well studied part of the world Consequently the majority of the species and subspecies already were scientifically described several decades ago In 2016 the first new curly tailed lizard since the early 1980s was described The species was found in the coastal dunes of Bahia de las Calderas in the southwestern Dominican Republic This species differs from the rest within Leiocephalidae in that its bony parietal table is U shaped versus V shaped the males have 3 4 enlarged post postcloacal scales versus 2 and there are specific sexual dimorphism trails 17 Species and subspecies EditThe following species and subspecies listed alphabetically by scientific name are recognized as being valid by the Reptile Database 18 Extant and recently extinct species Edit Image Scientific name Common Name Subspecies DistributionLeiocephalus barahonensis Schmidt 1921 orange bellied curlytail L b altavelensis Noble amp Hassler 1933 Alto Velo curly tailed lizard Alto Velo curlytail likely better regarded as a separate species 19 20 L b aureus Cochran 1934 L b barahonensis Schmidt 1921 L b beatanus Noble 1923 L b oxygaster A Schwartz 1967 Hispaniola nbsp Leiocephalus carinatus Gray 1827 saw scaled curlytail northern curly tailed lizard L c carinatus Gray 1827 L c aquarius Schwartz amp Ogren 1956 L c armouri Barbour amp Shreve 1935 L c cayensis Schwartz 1959 L c coryi K P Schmidt 1936 L c granti Rabb 1957 L c hodsdoni K P Schmidt 1936 L c labrossytus Schwartz 1959 South Central Cuba Playa Larga L c microcyon Schwartz 1959 L c mogotensis Schwartz 1959 L c virescens Stejneger 1901 L c zayasi Schwartz 1959 Bahama Islands the Cayman Islands and Cuba nbsp Leiocephalus cubensis Gray 1840 Cuban brown curlytail Cuban curlytail lizard L c cubensis Gray 1840 L c gigas A Schwartz 1959 L c minor Varona amp Garrido 1970 L c pambasileus A Schwartz 1959 L c paraphrus A Schwartz 1959 Cuba Leiocephalus endomychus A Schwartz 1967 Hinche curlytail Central Haitian curlytail possibly extinct last seen in 1976 Haiti Leiocephalus eremitus Cope 1868 Navassa curlytail lizard extinct 19th century Navassa IslandLeiocephalus greenwayi Barbour amp Shreve 1935 East Plana curlytail Plana Cay curlytail lizard Bahama Islands Leiocephalus herminieri A M C Dumeril amp Bibron 1837 Martinique curlytail lizard extinct 19th century Trinidad and TobagoLeiocephalus inaguae Cochran 1931 Inagua curlytail lizard BahamasLeiocephalus loxogrammus Cope 1887 San Salvador curlytail Rum Cay curlytail lizard L l loxogrammus Cope 1887 L l parnelli Barbour amp Shreve 1935 Bahamas nbsp Leiocephalus lunatus Cochran 1934 Hispaniolan maskless curlytail Santo Domingo curlytail lizard L l arenicolor Mertens 1939 L l lewisi A Schwartz 1967 L l louisae Cochran 1934 L l lunatus Cochran 1934 L l melaenoscelis A Schwartz 1967 L l thomasi A Schwartz 1967 Dominican Republic nbsp Leiocephalus macropus Cope 1863 Cuban side blotched curlytail Monte Verde curlytail lizard L m aegialus A Schwartz amp Garrido 1967 L m asbolomus A Schwartz amp Garrido 1967 L m felinoi Garrido 1979 L m hoplites Zug 1959 L m hyacinthurus Zug 1959 L m immaculatus Hardy 1958 L m koopmani Zug 1959 L m lenticulatus Garrido 1973 L m macropus Cope 1863 L m phylax A Schwartz amp Garrido 1967 L m torrei Garrido 1979 Cuba nbsp Leiocephalus melanochlorus Cope 1863 Tiburon curlytail Jeremie curlytailed lizard L m hypsistus Schwartz 1966 L m melanochlorus Cope 1863 Haiti Leiocephalus onaneyi Garrido 1973 Guantanamo striped curlytail Guantanamo striped curly tailed lizard Sierra curlytail lizard Cuba nbsp Leiocephalus personatus Cope 1863 Hispaniolan masked curlytail Haitian curlytail lizard Hispaniola Leiocephalus pratensis Cochran 1928 Haitian striped curlytail Atalaye curlytail lizard possibly extinct last seen in 1966 L p chimarus A Schwartz 1979 L p pratensis Cochran 1928 Haiti nbsp Leiocephalus psammodromus Barbour 1920 Turks and Caicos curlytail Bastion Cay curlytail lizard L p aphretor A Schwartz 1967 L p apocrinus A Schwartz 1967 L p cacodoxus A Schwartz 1967 L p hyphantus A Schwartz 1967 L p mounax A Schwartz 1967 L p psammodromus Barbour 1920 Turks and Caicos IslandsLeiocephalus punctatus Cochran 1931 Crooked Acklins curlytail spotted curlytail lizard Bahamas Leiocephalus raviceps Cope 1863 pallid curlytail mountain curlytail lizard L r delavarai Garrido 1973 L r jaumei A Schwartz amp Garrido 1968 L r kilinikowski A Schwartz 1960 L r raviceps Cope 1863 L r uzzelli A Schwartz 1960 Cuba Leiocephalus rhutidira A Schwartz 1979 Haitian black throated curlytail Lapierre curlytail lizard possibly extinct last seen in 1978 Haiti Leiocephalus roquetus Bochaton Charles and Lenoble 2021 La Desirade curlytail lizard curlytail roquet extinct late 19th century Guadeloupe nbsp Leiocephalus schreibersii Gravenhorst 1838 red sided curlytail red sided curly tailed lizard L s nesomorus A Schwartz 1968 L s schreibersii Gravenhorst 1838 HispaniolaLeiocephalus semilineatus Dunn 1920 Hispaniolan pale bellied curlytail Thomazeau curlytail lizard Pale bellied Hispaniolan curlytail Hispaniola nbsp Leiocephalus sixtoi Kohler Bobadilla amp Hedges 2016 Hispaniolan dune curlytail Hispaniola nbsp Leiocephalus stictigaster A Schwartz 1959 Cuban striped curlytail Cabo Corrientes curlytail lizard L s astictus A Schwartz 1959 L s celeustes A Schwartz amp Garrido 1968 L s exotheotus A Schwartz 1959 L s gibarensis A Schwartz amp Garrido 1968 L s lipomator A Schwartz amp Garrido 1968 L s lucianus A Schwartz 1960 L s naranjoi A Schwartz amp Garrido 1968 L s ophiplacodes A Schwartz 1964 L s parasphex A Schwartz 1964 L s septentrionalis Garrido 1975 L s sierrae A Schwartz 1959 L s stictigaster A Schwartz 1959 Cuba nbsp Leiocephalus varius Garman 1887 Cayman curlytail Cayman curly tailed lizard Cayman Islands Leiocephalus vinculum Cochran 1928 Gonave curlytail Cochran s curlytail lizard Haiti Fossil and subfossil species Edit Leiocephalus cuneus Etheridge 1964 Leeward Islands curlytail extinct Late Quaternary of Antigua and Barbuda and potentially Anguilla La Desirade and Marie Galante but might have survived to recent times Leiocephalus etheridgei Pregill 1981 Morovis curlytail extinct Late Pleistocene of Puerto Rico Leiocephalus jamaicensis Etheridge 1966 Jamaican curlytail extinct Late Pleistocene or Holocene of Jamaica Leiocephalus partitus Pregill 1981 Guanica curlytail extinct Pleistocene or Holocene of Puerto Rico Nota bene A binomial authority or trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species or subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Leiocephalus References Edit Leiocepalus Dahms Tierleben www dahmstierleben de Zheng Yuchi Wiens John J 1 January 2016 Combining phylogenomic and supermatrix approaches and a time calibrated phylogeny for squamate reptiles lizards and snakes based on 52 genes and 4162 species Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 94 Pt B 537 547 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2015 10 009 ISSN 1055 7903 PMID 26475614 a b c d Bochaton Corentin Charles Laurent Lenoble Arnaud 15 February 2021 Historical and fossil evidence of an extinct endemic species of Leiocephalus Squamata Leiocephalidae from the Guadeloupe Islands Zootaxa 4927 3 383 409 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 4927 3 4 ISSN 1175 5334 PMID 33756701 S2CID 232337806 a b c J Vitt Laurie 2014 Herpetology an introductory biology of amphibians and reptiles Caldwell Janalee P 4th ed Amsterdam ISBN 9780123869197 OCLC 839312807 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Hedges B All Islands CaribHerp Retrieved 2 July 2019 a b Conant R J T Collins 1998 A Field Guide to the Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America 3 ed Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 244 246 ISBN 978 0395904527 a b Search results The Reptile Database reptile database reptarium cz Retrieved 1 March 2021 a b Kircher B L C D Robinson M A Johnson 2014 Herbivory in the Northern Curly tailed Lizard Leiocephalus carinatus Caribbean Herpetology 50 1 2 doi 10 31611 ch 50 Steinberg Losos Schoener Spiller Kolbe Leal 2004 Predation associated modulation of movement based signals by a Bahamian lizard PNAS 11 25 9187 9192 doi 10 1073 pnas 1407190111 PMC 4078856 PMID 24843163 Cooper W E 2007 Escape and its relationship to pursuit deterrent signaling in the Cuban curly tailed lizard Leiocephalus carinatus Herpetologica 63 2 144 150 doi 10 1655 0018 0831 2007 63 144 EAIRTP 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86526680 a b Kircher B K M A Johnson 2017 Why do curly tail lizards genus Leiocephalus curl their tails An assessment of displays toward conspecifics and predators Ethology 123 5 342 347 doi 10 1111 eth 12603 Fong A 2017 Leiocephalus onaneyi IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T75310301A75607524 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 2 RLTS T75310301A75607524 en a b 57 Central Haitian Curlytail EDGE species Retrieved 2 July 2019 a b 73 Lapierre Curlytail Lizard EDGE species Retrieved 2 July 2019 Meiri S et al 2017 Extinct obscure or imaginary The lizard species with the smallest ranges PDF Diversity and Distributions 24 2 262 273 doi 10 1111 ddi 12678 75 Atalaye Curlytail Lizard EDGE species Retrieved 2 July 2019 Kohler Gunther Bobadilla Marcos J Rodriguez Hedges S Blair 13 June 2016 A new dune dwelling lizard of the genus Leiocephalus Iguania Leiocephalidae from the Dominican Republic Zootaxa 4121 5 517 32 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 4121 5 2 ISSN 1175 5334 PMID 27395240 S2CID 9386834 Leiocephalus at the Reptarium cz Reptile Database Accessed 2 July 2019 Inchaustegui S Landestoy M Powell R amp Hedges B 2017 errata version of 2016 assessment Leiocephalus altavelensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T75306189A115482003 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T75306189A75607464 en Retrieved 14 September 2021 Hedges S Blair 2021 Isla Alto Velo Caribherp Amphibians and reptiles of Caribbean Islands Retrieved 14 September 2021 Further reading EditGray JE 1827 A Description of a new Genus and some new species of Saurian Reptiles with a Revision of the Species of Chameleons Philosoph Mag Ann Chem Math Astron Nat Hist Gen Sci 2 9 207 214 Leiocephalus new genus p 207 Schwartz A Thomas R 1975 A Check list of West Indian Amphibians and Reptiles Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication No 1 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Carnegie Museum of Natural History 216 pp Leiocephalus species L barahonensis L viniculum pp 126 140 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Curly tailed lizard amp oldid 1173947920, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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