苏里南首次发现无鳞足虱

A. Bauer, Todd R. Jackman, E. Greenbaum, T. Papenfuss
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引用次数: 7

摘要

鳞片足虱的自然分布包括南亚和东南亚的部分地区,以及太平洋西部和中部地区,但它已经与人类和货物的船只运动联系起来(Bauer和Henle, 1994;杆,2003)。中美洲和南美洲的已知地点包括尼加拉瓜、哥斯达黎加、巴拿马、哥伦比亚、厄瓜多尔、秘鲁和巴西的沿海地区(Smith and Grant, 1961;Schauenberg, 1968;Mechler, 1968;Ineich, 1999;杆,2003;科勒,2003)。这一物种以前在苏里南并不为人所知(Hoogmoed, 1973),这是首次报道的种群。该物种在帕拉马里博生态度假酒店夜间的墙壁上很常见,没有看到其他夜间活动的壁虎物种,但在苏里南Brokopondo地区调查的人类影响较小的地区却没有。最近的公布地点在哥伦比亚。Kluge(1968[1966])报道该物种来自哥伦比亚东部一个未指明的地点。然而,这一记录并没有被引用的凭据材料所支持,这使得哥伦比亚西南部的瓜皮、图马科、卡利和安奇卡亚(Ineich, 1999)这些距离大约2750公里的地方成为最近的经证实的鳞翅目动物遗址。巴西唯一的记录是基于1858年巴西巴西巴西的Peropus ectus Girard (L. lugubris的低级同义种)的全型记录,但地点可疑,该物种再也没有在巴西被发现过(Vanzolini, 1968)。因此,这里报道的帕拉马里博动物代表了大西洋最南端的鳞趾动物种群,也是巴拿马地峡以东唯一的南美洲种群。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
First record of Lepidodactylus lugubris in Suriname
The natural distribution of Lepidodactylus lugubris includes portions of south and southeast Asia, as well as areas of the western and central Pacific, but it has become established extralimitally in association with the movement of people and cargo by ship (Bauer and Henle, 1994; Lever, 2003). Known localities in Central and South America include coastal sites in Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil (Smith and Grant, 1961; Schauenberg, 1968; Mechler, 1968; Ineich, 1999; Lever, 2003; Kohler, 2003). This species was not previously known from Suriname (Hoogmoed, 1973), and this is the first reported population. The species was common on walls at night at the Eco Resort Hotel in Paramaribo, where no other nocturnal gecko species were seen, but was absent from less humanimpacted areas investigated in the Brokopondo District of Suriname. The nearest published localities are in Colombia. Kluge (1968 [1966]) reported the species from an unspecified locality in eastern Colombia. This record is not, however, supported by cited voucher material, making the southwestern Colombian localities of Guapi, Tumaco, Cali and Anchicaya (Ineich, 1999), each approximately 2750 km away, the nearest confirmed Lepidodactylus sites. The single Brazilian record is based on the holotype of Peropus neglectus Girard, 1858, a junior synonym of L. lugubris, from Rio de Janeiro, but the locality is suspect and the species has never again been found in Brazil (Vanzolini, 1968). Thus, the Paramaribo animals reported here represent the southernmost Atlantic population of Lepidodactylus lugubris and the only South American population east of the Isthmus of Panama.
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