Hypsilurus dilophus

Crowned Forest Dragon
Hypsilurus dilophus, Lakekamu Basin, Papua New Guinea
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Iguania
Family: Agamidae
Subfamily: Agaminae
Genus: Hypsilurus
Species: H. dilophus
Binomial name
Hypsilurus dilophus
Duméril & Bibron, 1837
Synonyms
  • Lophyrus dilophus Duméril & Bibron, 1837
  • Tiare dilophe Duméril & Bibron, 1837
  • Calotes megapogon Schlegel in Duméril & Bibron, 1837
  • Tiaris megapogon John Edward Gray, 1845 (fide Boulenger, 1885)
  • Gonocephalus dilophus Adolf Bernard Meyer, 1874
  • Gonyocephalus dilophus Boulenger, 1885
  • Gonyocephalus dilophus De Rooij, 1915
  • Goniocephalus dilophus Loveridge, 1948
  • Gonocephalus dilophus Wermuth, 1967
  • Hypsilurus dilophus Manthey & Schuster, 1999
  • Hypsilurus dilophus Kraus & Myers, 2012

The Crowned forest dragon or Indonesian forest dragon (Hypsilurus dilophus) is a large arboreal agamid lizard found in New Guinea and the Moluccan islands, Indonesia.

Etymology

The generic name Hypsilurus comes from "upsilon-tail". Upsilon ("ϒ") is the Greek letter on which the English uppercase "Y" is based. The specific name, dilophus, is from the Greek for 'double crested'.

Description

A large, short-tailed species with heterogeneous dorsal scalation and a discontinuous vertebral crest. There are several slightly enlarged scales below the tympanum, a row of enlarged submaxillaries and a serlies of large, lanceolate scales on the anterior edge of the gular pouch.

The species differs from H. boydii in that it lacks large conical scales below the tympanum; it differs from H. spinipes in that it has lanceolate scales on the nuchal and dorsal crests (rather than triangular); and it differs from all other species of Hypsilurus in that it has a heterogeneous (rather than homogeneous) dorsal scalation.

Distribution

This species is found in New Guinea and the Moluccan islands, Indonesia. It is present across the entire island of New Guinea, although it appears to have an upper elevation limit of 800 metres. It has been recorded on the Moluccan islands of Aru and Kei, Batanta and Salawati in West Papua Province, Numfoor and Yapen in Papua Province, Indonesian New Guinea and Fergusson island in Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea.[1][2] As this species appears to exhibit an association with rainforest or former rainforest, it is probably absent from the savannah of the Trans-Fly, and no records from this region are known.

Habitat and ecology

Found in lowland and mid-montane primary and secondary rainforest. It is primarily found in the forest interior and regrowth areas, and will persist in areas of garden agriculture with some trees. It is an arboreal species whose prey includes insects and small fruits.[3]

Conservation

Although lowland rainforest in Papua New Guinea is increasingly being cleared for logging and conversion to agriculture, this species is widespread across the island and can persist in some modified habitats, so it's unlikely to be in any imminent danger.

The species is occasionally traded in small numbers from Papua Province in Indonesian New Guinea.[4] It is not CITES-listed and is not legally protected in Indonesia, but the level of trade that has been observed appears unlikely to have a significant effect on wild populations.

Taxonomy

Research is needed to clarify the taxonomy of what is more than likely a complex of species. Its closest relatives are H. boydii and H. spinipes.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Manthey, U., and W. Denzer. 2005 A revision of the Melanesian-Australian angle head lizards of the genus Hypsilurus (Sauria: Agamidae: Amphibolurinae), with description of four new species and one new subspecies. Hamadryad 30: 1-40
  2. Richards, S. and Dahl, C. 2011. Herpetofauna of the Strickland Basin and Muller Range, Papua New Guinea. RAP Bulletin of Biological Assessment.
  3. Allison, A., Bickford, D., Richards, S. and Torr, G. 1998. A biological assessment of the Lakekamu Basin, Papua New Guinea. Conservation International 58-62: 156-172.
  4. Natusch, D.J.D. and Lyons, J.A. 2012. Exploited for pets. The harvest and trade of amphibians and reptiles from Indonesia New Guinea. Biodiversity Conservation 21: 2899-2911.

Further reading

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