Wednesday, September 18, 2013

[Herpetology • 2013] Four new species of California Legless Lizards (Anniella); Anniella alexanderae, A. campi, A. grinnelli & A. stebbinsi


Figure 3. Four new species of Anniella and their diagnostic characters. Upper left, Anniella alexanderae: dorsal (MVZ 250549, paratype); ventral view showing the diagnostic gray coloration (MVZ 257720, paratype).
Upper right, Anniella campi: dorsal (MCZ-R-189380, paratype); detail (MVZ 257277, holotype) showing diagnostic double dark lateral stripes.
Lower left, Anniella grinnelli: ventral (MVZ 247487, paratype) showing diagnostic purple coloration; dorsal (MVZ 267228, paratype).
Lower right, Anniella stebbinsi: dorsal (MVZ 250558, paratype); ventral (MVZ 267248).
Center: comparison of ventral coloration from three of the new species. Left, A. grinnelli (MVZ 250546, paratype); center, A. alexanderae (MVZ 250549, paratype); right, A. stebbinsi (MVZ 250558, paratype).

Abstract
A previous genetic study of the California legless lizard (Anniella pulchra) revealed five deep genetic lineages and alluded to morphological differences among them. Here we show that three of these genetic lineages can be readily diagnosed from topotypic A. pulchra through a combination of coloration, scalation, and skeletal characters (trunk vertebra number). A fourth lineage is cryptic, but can be diagnosed from A. pulchra by its karyotype. We argue that these genetic clades of A. pulchra are strong candidates for species recognition because they exhibit properties that corroborate the DNA evidence for lineage separation. We therefore hypothesize that each of the five genetic clades of A. pulchra (‘‘Anniella clades A–E’’) are distinct species and so describe four new species (Anniella alexanderae, sp. nov., Anniella campi, sp. nov., Anniella grinnelli, sp. nov., and Anniella stebbinsi, sp. nov.). In naming these new species we have chosen to honor four natural historians whose contributions to the study of California’s vertebrate biodiversity are an ongoing inspiration for students of natural history and natural history museum curators. Two of these new species have small and poorly characterized ranges in the San Joaquin Valley and Carrizo Plain (A. alexanderae and A. grinnelli). A third restricted-range species (A. campi) is known from just three sites in the eastern Sierra Nevada. The fourth new species (A. stebbinsi) is a wide-ranging cryptic lineage that occurs throughout Southern California and into Baja California, Mexico. The limited distribution and fragile habitats occupied by the new species of Anniella warrant additional scientific research and conservation attention.

Keywords: Anniella pulchra; California; conservation; lizard; new species


Figure 4. Type localities of the four new species of Anniella.
Upper left, Anniella alexanderae: Kern County, California, U.S.A. Upper right, Anniella campi: Kern County, California, U.S.A. Lower left, Anniella grinnelli: Jack Zaninovich Memorial Nature Trail, Sand Ridge Preserve, Kern County, California, U.S.A. Lower right, Anniella stebbinsi: El Segundo Dunes, Los Angeles International Airport, Los Angeles County, California, U.S.A.


J.F. Parham og T.J. Papenfuss. 2013. Four new species of California Legless Lizards (Anniella). Breviora. 536. http://mczbase.mcz.harvard.edu/specimen_images/publications/Breviora_536.pdf