A new cryptic arboreal species of the Cyrtodactylus brevipalmatus group (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from the uplands of western Thailand
Creators
- 1. La Sierra University, Riverside, United States of America|San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, United States of America
- 2. University of Phayao, Phayao, Thailand
- 3. Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia
- 4. M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia
- 5. Rabbit in the Moon Foundation, Suan Phueng, Thailand
- 6. Vietnam National University, Hanoi, Vietnam|American Museum of Natural History, New York, United States of America
- 7. Vietnam National University of Forestry, Xuan Mai, Vietnam
- 8. M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia|Joint Russian-Vietnamese Tropical Research and Technological Center, Hanoi, Vietnam
Description
The first integrative taxonomic analysis of the Cyrtodactylus brevipalmatus group of Southeast Asia recovered two newly discovered populations from the Tenasserim Mountains in Suan Phueng District, Ratchaburi Province, Thailand as a new species described here as C. rukhadeva sp. nov. Based on 1397 base pairs of the mitochondrial gene NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 (ND2), C. rukhadeva sp. nov. is the well-supported sister species to a clade containing three undescribed species, C. ngati, and C. cf. interdigitalis with a large uncorrected pairwise sequence divergence from other species in the brevipalmatus group ranging from 15.4–22.1%. Cyrtodactylus elok and C. brevipalmatus are recovered as poorly supported sister species and the well-supported sister lineage to the remainder of the brevipalmatus group. Cyrtodactylus rukhadeva sp. nov. is putatively diagnosable on the basis of a number of meristic characters and easily separated from the remaining species of the brevipalmatus group by a number of discrete morphological characters as well as its statistically significant wide separation in multivariate morphospace. The discovery of C. rukhadeva sp. nov. continues to underscore the unrealized herpetological diversity in the upland forests of the Tenasserim Mountains and that additional field work will undoubtedly result in the discovery of additional new species.
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