Diploderma polygonatum explained
Diploderma polygonatum, also known as Ryukyu japalure and Okinawa tree lizard, is a species of lizard found in the Ryukyu Islands and Taiwan.[1] [2] It is diurnal and arboreal.[3] An adult male Diploderma polygonatum measures "61 mm. from snout to vent, and 152 mm. from vent to tip of tail; total length 213 mm."[4] The splenial of this lizard is short, as is that of Trapelus agilis.[5] The lizard is also closely related to Diploderma swinhonis.
Notes and References
- Web site: Diploderma polygonatum. The Reptile Database. 2016-06-30.
- Book: Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society, Volume 90. 1993. Bombay Natural History Society. English. Three subspecies are recognized (Ota 1991): Japalura polygonata polygonata (greatest part of Ryukyu Islands); J. p. ishigakiensis Van Denburgh, 1912 (Yaeyama group, southern Ryukyu Islands); J. p. xanthostoma Ota, 1991 (lowlands of ... .
- Book: Zoological Studies, Volume 46. 2007. Institute of Zoology, Academia Sinica. English . 224. Some of them are diurnally arboreal species such as Japalura polygonata xanthostoma (H. Lin, unpubl. obs.)..
- Book: Stejneger, Leonhard. Herpetology of Japan and Adjacent Territory . 1907. U.S. Government Printing Office. English . 188.
- Book: Gans, Carl. Biology of the Reptilia: Morphology H : the skull of Lepidosauria. 30 June 2016. 1969. Academic Press. English . 9780916984762. The splenial is generally reduced (e.g., Japalura polygonata, Trapelus agilis), absent, or fused (Moody, 1980), but remains long in the Cretaceous genus Mimeosaurus (Gao and Hou, 1995)..