| Literature DB >> 21976992 |
Robert W Murphy1, Kristin H Berry, Taylor Edwards, Alan E Leviton, Amy Lathrop, J Daren Riedle.
Abstract
We investigate a cornucopia of problems associated with the identity of the desert tortoise, Gopherus agassizii (Cooper). The date of publication is found to be 1861, rather than 1863. Only one of the three original cotypes exists, and it is designated as the lectotype of the species. Another cotype is found to have been destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and subsequent fire. The third is lost. The lectotype is genetically confirmed to be from California, and not Arizona, USA as sometimes reported. Maternally, the holotype of Gopherus lepidocephalus (Ottley & Velázques Solis. 1989) from the Cape Region of Baja California Sur, Mexico is also from the Mojavian population of the desert tortoise, and not from Tiburon Island, Sonora, Mexico as previously proposed. A suite of characters serve to diagnose tortoises west and north of the Colorado River, the Mojavian population, from those east and south of the river in Arizona, USA, and Sonora and Sinaloa, Mexico, the Sonoran population. Species recognition is warranted and because Gopherus lepidocephalus is from the Mojavian population, no names are available for the Sonoran species. Thus, a new species, Gopherus morafkaisp. n., is named and this action reduces the distribution of Gopherus agassizii to only 30% of its former range. This reduction has important implications for the conservation and protection of Gopherus agassizii, which may deserve a higher level of protection.Entities:
Keywords: Arizona; California; Gopherus lepidocephalus; Lectotype; Mexico; Xerobates; desert tortoise; recovery units
Year: 2011 PMID: 21976992 PMCID: PMC3187627 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.113.1353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Figure 1.Portrait of Dr. James Graham Cooper, M.D. who discovered and described (courtesy of the Archives of the California Academy of Sciences).
Summary of morphological, physiological, and ecological characteristics that differ between populations of desert tortoises from the Mojave and Sonoran deserts.
| Character | Mojave Desert | Sonoran Desert | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Morphology-shell shape | |||
| Width of shell at mid-bridge | significantly wider shell | ||
| Length of gular scutes | Significantly longer gular scutes | Germano1993 | |
| Significantly shorter length of projection of anal scutes | |||
| General shape of shell | California: box-like, high-domed; Utah: box-like, low-domed, shorter plastron | Flatter, pear-shaped | |
| Geographical distribution | North and west of the Colorado River | South and east of the Colorado River | |
| Habitats occupied Topography | Predominantly valleys and alluvial fans | Predominantly slopes and rocky hillsides | |
| Vegetation types | Mojave Desert: Saltbush scrub, creosote bush scrub, desert scrub, tree yucca woodland | Sonoran Desert: Arizona upland, thornscrub, desert grassland | |
| Egg production | |||
| Mid-line carapace length (mm MCL) at first reproduction | 176 (Germano), 178 ( | 220 | |
| Oviposition time (range) | April to mid-July | Early June to early August | |
| Number of clutches/yr | 0–3 | 0–1 | |
| Number of eggs per year | 5–16 | 1–12, avg. ~5 | |
| Proportion of females ovipositing/yr | 0.67–1.0; typically 1.0 | 0.36–0.80; typically < 1, based on one study (Averill-Murray) | |
Figure 2.Distribution of the desert tortoises aligned with . The locality of BYU 39706 from Baja California Sur is shown as a black dot. The location of the hybrid population described in McLuckie et al. (1999) is shown as a star.
Figure 3.Implied alignment of the mitochondrial DNA sequence data spanning the partial genes NADH3, tRNAArg and ND4L from tortoises of the complex. BYU 39706 is the holotype of . USNM 7888 is the lectotype of . GenBank sequence DQ649394 is the sequence of in widespread group A of Murphy et al. (2007), DQ649398 is from narrowly distributed group B, and DQ649406 is a specimen of from Tucson, Arizona. “n” indicates unresolved or ambiguous base pairs.
Figure 4.Dorsal view of the lectotype of , USNM 7888. Black bar is 3 cm.
Figure 5.Ventral view of the holotype of , USNM 7888. Black bar is 3 cm.
Figure 6.Anterior view of the holotype of , USNM 7888. Black bar is 3 cm.
Figure 7.Posterior view of the holotype of , USNM 7888.
Figure 9.Dorsal view of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 10.Ventral view of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 11.Anterior view of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 12.Posterior view of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 13.Detail of head scales of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 14.Right, lateral view of the head of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 15.Detailed view of the anal scutes of the holotype of , CAS 33867.
Figure 8.Left, lateral view of the holotype of , USNM 7888.