identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
BC118799FFBBFF98FF628BC6E376FE8D.text	BC118799FFBBFF98FF628BC6E376FE8D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cnemaspis koynaensis Khandekar & Thackeray & Agarwal 2019	<div><p>Cnemaspis koynaensis sp. nov.</p><p>Figs. 2–5, 6 A&amp;B; Table 3 &amp; 4.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 6D6FE89B-D099-48AE-9266-0CF06A33C8DD</p><p>Holotype. NCBS-BH685 (AK 470), SVL 32.4 mm, adult male, collected near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.731&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.413" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.731/lat 17.413)">Dhanagarwada</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.731&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.413" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.731/lat 17.413)">Humbarli village</a>, near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.731&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.413" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.731/lat 17.413)">Koyna</a> (17.413° N 73.731° E; ca. 970 m asl.), <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.731&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.413" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.731/lat 17.413)">Satara District</a>, Maharashtra, India, by <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.731&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=17.413" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.731/lat 17.413)">Akshay Khandekar</a>, Swapnil Pawar and Tejas Thackeray, on 12 September 2018.</p><p>Paratypes. NCBS-BH687 (AK 297), SVL 31.1 mm, NCBS-BH688 (AK 298), SVL 31.3 mm, BNHS 2538 (AK 301), SVL 30.5 mm, BNHS 2541 (AK 580), SVL 27.3 mm, adult males; NCBS-BH689 (AK 299), SVL 23.9 mm, sub-adult male; BNHS 2539 (AK 578), SVL 28.7 mm, BNHS 2540 (AK 579), SVL 30.4 mm, adult females; NCBS-BH686 (AK 296), SVL 22.1 mm, sub-adult female; same collection data as holotype .</p><p>Etymology. The specific epithet is a toponym for Koyna in Satara District of Maharashtra, the type and only known locality for this species.</p><p>Suggested Common Name. Koyna dwarf gecko.</p><p>Diagnosis and comparison with Indian congeners. A small-sized Cnemaspis, SVL less than 33.0 mm (n =9). Dorsal pholidosis heterogeneous, weakly keeled, granular scales intermixed with large, strongly keeled, conical tubercles; 10–14 longitudinal rows of dorsal tubercles, 18–25 tubercles in paravertebral rows; spine-like scales present on flanks; ventral scales on belly smooth, subimbricate; 20–26 scales across mid-body, 128–139 longitudinal scales between mental to anterior border of cloaca; subdigital scansors smooth, entire, unnotched; subdigital lamellae under fourth digit of pes 17–21; males with three or four femoral pores on each thigh, separated by 22–25 poreless scales; dorsal side of tail with enlarged, strongly keeled, conical tubercles forming whorls; median row of subcaudals smooth, not enlarged.</p><p>Cnemaspis koynaensis sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other peninsular Indian congeners on the basis of the following differing or non-overlapping characters: spine-like scales present on flanks (versus absent in C. adii Srinivasulu, Kumar &amp; Srinivasulu, C. agarwali Khandekar, C. ajijae, C. anamudiensis Cyriac, Johny, Umesh &amp; Palot, C. australis Manamendra-Arachchi, Batuwita &amp; Pethiyagoda, C. beddomei (Theobald), C. boiei (Gray), C. girii, C. gracilis (Beddome), C. heteropholis, C. indica Gray, C. kolhapurensis, C. kottiyoorensis Cyriac &amp; Umesh, C. limayei, C. maculicollis Cyriac, Johny, Umesh &amp; Palot, C. mahabali, C. nairi Inger, Marx &amp; Koshy, C. ornata (Beddome), C. otai Das &amp; Bauer, C. shevaroyensis Khandekar, Gaitonde &amp; Agarwal, C. sisparensis (Theobald), C. thackerayi Khandekar, Gaitonde &amp; Agarwal, C. wynadensis (Beddome), C. yercaudensis Das &amp; Bauer); scales on dorsal aspect of trunk heterogeneous (versus homogeneous in C. adii, C. assamensis, C. australis, C. boiei, C. indica, C. jerdonii, C. kolhapurensis, C. littoralis Jerdon, C. mysoriensis (Jerdon), C. nilagirica and C. sisparensis); original tail with smooth imbricate median row of unenlarged subcaudals (versus smooth enlarged median row of subcaudals in C. adii, C. agarwali, C. boiei, C. gracilis, C. heteropholis Bauer, C. indica, C. jerdonii, C. kolhapurensis, C. nairi, C. nilagirica Manamendra-Arachchi, Batuwita &amp; Pethiyagoda, C. ornata, C. shevaroyensis, C. sisparensis, C. thackerayi, and C. wynadensis; C. amboliensis, C. australis and C. goaensis with keeled subcaudals); absence of keeled scales on the venter or gular regions (versus keeled scales on the venter or gular region in C. australis, C. monticola Manamendra-Arachchi, Batuwita &amp; Pethiyagoda and C. nilagirica); males lacking precloacal pores and having three or four femoral pores on each side, separated by 22–25 poreless scales (versus males with only precloacal pores present in C. anamudiensis, C. beddomei, C. maculicollis, C. nairi, C. ornata; males with both femoral and precloacal pores present in C. adii, C. agarwali, C. amboliensis, C. australis, C. goaensis; C. gracilis, C. mysoriensis, C. otai, C. shevaroyensis, C. thackerayi, C. yercaudensis; males with a continuous series of 26–28 precloacal-femoral pores in C. kolhapurensis; males without femoral and precloacal pores in C. assamensis Das &amp; Sengupta; males with eight femoral pores in C. jerdonii (Theobald), six in C. heteropholis, 14–18 in C. littoralis, seven or eight in C. sisparensis, 4–6 in C. wynadensis).</p><p>C. koynaensis sp. nov. morphologically similar to C. flaviventralis, from which it can be distinguished by having 22–26 ventral scales across the mid-body (versus 28 or 29 in C. flaviventralis), having 22–25 poreless scales between femoral pores (versus 27–29). Additionally, C. koynaensis sp. nov. is 18.4 % divergent from C. flaviventralis in ND2 sequences (Table 2). C. koynaensis sp. nov. is just 7.9% divergent from C. girii and differs only in the presence of spine-like scales on the flanks (versus absence in C. girii), and slightly less ventral scale rows (20–26) across the mid-body (versus 26–28 in C. girii n = 9 each).</p><p>Description of the holotype. Adult male in good state of preservation except that the tail is slightly bent towards the left and about 2.8 mm long incision in the ventral side of mid-body for liver tissue sample (Fig. 3). SVL 30.4 mm, head short (HL/ SVL 0.26), wide (HW /HL 0.66), not strongly depressed (HD /HL 0.42), distinct from neck. Loreal region slightly inflated, canthus rostralis not prominent. Snout less than half of head length (ES /HL 0.36), longer than eye diameter (ED / ES 0.59); scales on snout and canthus rostralis large, weakly keeled, juxtaposed; larger than those on forehead and interorbital region; occipital and temporal region with much smaller granules, intermixed with larger, roughly rounded, tubercles (Fig. 3A). Eye small (ED /HL 0.21); with round pupil; orbit with extra-brillar fringe scales that are largest anteriorly; supraciliaries not elongate. Ear-opening deep, roughly circular, small (EL /HL 0.05); eye to ear distance greater than diameter of eye (EE / ED 1.42) (Fig. 3C). Rostral much wider (1.5 mm) than long (0.8 mm), incompletely divided dorsally by a strongly developed rostral groove for more than half of its length; single enlarged supranasal on each side, roughly similar in size to postnasals, separated from each other by a smaller single internasal and two smaller scales on the snout; rostral in contact with first supralabial, nasal, supranasal and internasal; nostrils oval, each surrounded by postnasals, supranasal, rostral and first supralabial; two row of scales separate the orbit from the supralabials (Fig. 3C). Mental enlarged, subtriangular, slightly wider (1.6 mm) than long (1.4 mm); two pairs of postmentals, first pair large, roughly rectangular, a single enlarged gular scale separated left and right first postmentals, bordered by mental, infralabial I, second postmentals and two enlarged chin scales; second postmentals slightly smaller than first postmentals, bordered by first and second infralabials, first postmentals and three enlarged chin scales; three enlarged gular scale prevents contact of left and right outer postmentals; chin scales bordering postmentals roughly conical, weakly keeled, smaller than outermost postmentals, rest granular, much smaller, smooth; infralabials bordered below by a row of slightly enlarged scales, decreasing in size posteriorly (Fig. 3B). Supralabials to angle of jaw nine on each side and seven at midorbit on each side; supralabial I largest, decreasing in size posteriorly; nine infralabials to angle of jaw on each side, and seven at mid-orbit position on each side; first infralabial largest, decreasing in size posteriorly (Fig. 3C). Extra-brillar fringe scales 15 or 16 on each side, interorbital scale rows across narrowest point of frontal seven or eight; 29 or 30 scale rows between left and right supraciliaries at mid-orbit (Fig 3A).</p><p>Body relatively slender (BW / SVL 0.18), trunk less than half of SVL (AGL / SVL 0.36) with spine-like scales on lower flank and without ventrolateral folds. Dorsal scales on trunk heterogeneous, weakly keeled, granular scales intermixed with much larger, strongly keeled, conical tubercles. tubercles in approximately 13 longitudinal rows at mid-body; 19 tubercles in paravertebral row from above forelimb insertion to the hind limb insertion; scales on nape slightly smaller than those on paravertebral rows, smaller still on occiput. Ventral scales slightly larger than granular scales on dorsum, those on belly smooth, subimbricate, slightly rounded, subequal from chest to cloacal opening; ventral scale rows across mid-body 24; 128 scales from mental to anterior border of cloaca; scales on pectoral region slightly smaller than those on belly, flat and imbricate, smaller still on throat; gular region with much smaller, flattened granules with those on chin bordering postmentals, enlarged, juxtaposed and flattened (Fig. 3B &amp; 6B). Precloacal pores absent, three femoral pores on each side separated by 25 poreless scales (Fig. 3D).</p><p>Scales on palm and sole, smooth, flat and roughly circular; scales on dorsal aspect of manus and pes heterogenous, upper arm slightly larger than those on mid-body dorsum, strongly keeled, and subimbricate; those near forelimb insertion, much smaller, granular, weakly keeled; scales on dorsal aspect of forearm smaller than those on upper arm, weakly keeled, flat, and roughly rounded; scales on elbow weakly keeled, subimbricate, and similar in size to those on upper arm; dorsal aspect of hand predominantly bearing small, flattened, weakly keeled, imbricate scales. Ventral aspect of upper arm with smooth, subimbricate scales; forearm and wrist with larger, weakly keeled, subimbricate scales. Scales on dorsal aspect of thigh larger than those on dorsum, strongly keeled, imbricate except those near hind-limb insertion which are much smaller, weakly keeled, and subimbricate. Scales on dorsal side of knee and shank slightly smaller than those on dorsum of thigh, weakly keeled, subimbricate; dorsal side of foot predominantly bearing flattened, strongly keeled, imbricate scales; scales on ventral aspect of thigh and shank similar in size of mid-body ventral scales, weakly keeled, and imbricate (Fig. 2). Forelimbs and hind-limbs moderately slender, long (LAL / SVL 0.14); (CL/ SVL 0.18); digits long, with a strong, slightly recurved claws, distinctly inflected, distal portions laterally compressed. Series of unpaired subdigital lamellae on basal portion of digits separated from narrower distal subdigital lamellae at first interphalangeal joint; proximal lamellae series: 2–4–5–5–5 (right manus; Fig. 3E), 2–4–5–7–5 (right pes; Fig. 3F), 2–4–5–5–5 (left manus), 2–4–5–8–4 (left pes); distal lamellae series: 8– 9–11–12–10 (right manus; Fig. 3F), 8– 9–12–12–12 (right pes; Fig. 3E), 9– 9–12–11–10 (left manus), 8– 9–12–12–11 (left pes). Relative length of digits (measurements in mm in parentheses): III (3.3)&gt; IV (3.2)&gt; V (2.9)&gt; II (2.8)&gt; I (2.0) (left manus); IV (4.4)&gt; V (3.5)&gt; III (3.3)&gt; II (2.5)&gt; I (1.6) (left pes).</p><p>Tail partially regenerated at tip, cylindrical, relatively slender, flattened beneath, base distinctly swollen when viewed ventrally, tail slightly longer than snout-vent length (TL/ SVL 1.01) (Fig. 2 C&amp;D). Dorsal scales at tail base granular, weakly keeled, similar in size and shape to those on mid-body dorsum, gradually becoming larger, flattened, pointed, subimbricate posteriorly, intermixed with slightly enlarged, strongly keeled, conical tubercles forming whorls; 6–8 tubercles on first 2–5 whorls; scales on dorsal and ventral aspect of regenerated portion of the tail slightly smaller than the granular scales on original tail, smooth, subimbricate. Scales on ventral aspect of original tail roughly twice the size to those on dorsal, imbricate, smooth, without a series of enlarged sub-caudal scales; those on tail base slightly smaller, imbricate and smooth, a single enlarged tricarinate postcloacal spur on each side (Fig. 3D).</p><p>......continued on the next page</p><p>Colouration in life. (Fig. 5 A–C) Dorsal ground colour of head, body, limbs, and tail light brown (Fig. 5C) to greyish-brown (Fig. 5A); head with numerous dark brown blotches, brille yellowish. Pupil black, iris golden coloured; Radiating line from orbit forming an indistinct preorbital streak on snout; yellow and dark grey alternating bands on labials; single brown postorbital streak, merging with its counterpart from the other orbit to form an indistinct W-shaped band on occiput, behind it small whitish spots, which bordered by another W-shaped marking on occiput. A single large central black ocellus bordered by rusty coloured tubercles on the forelimb insertion. Dorsum with seven light yellow or white diffuse vertebral blotches, fourth and sixth blotch with dark anterior marking; from forelimb insertion to hind-limb insertion with six diffuse dark blotches parallel to vertebral blotches on lateral sides of the body; spine-like scales yellow coloured. Dorsum of limbs with alternating light brown and dark brown bands; digits with alternating dark and white markings; dorsum of original portion of tail with alternating dark brown and whitish bands, regenerated portion dark brown. Gular, pectoral, abdominal region, under limbs, and tail base offwhite, mottled in brown; no dark markings on underside of tail; postcloacal spur and spines on the lateral sides of tail close to the cloacal opening light yellow. Juvenile colour different from adults: dorsum colour lighter adults (Fig. 5B), dorsal white vertebral markings extend to lateral sides; tail tip light yellow coloured.</p><p>Variation and additional information from type series. Mensural data for the type series is given in Table 3. There are five male and three female specimens ranging in size from 22.1 mm to 31.3 mm. All paratypes resemble the holotype except as follows: the number of lamellae on digit I of the manus ranges from 10–12 and on digit IV from 15–17; on digit I of the pes ranges from 10 or 11, on digit IV from 17–21 and on digit V from 15–18. NCBS- BH687, NCBS-BH 689 and BNHS 2541 with nine supralabials up to angle of jaw on each side, and NCBS-BH 686, NCBS-BH 688, BNHS 2538 and BNHS 2539 with eight supralabials, and BNHS 2540 with ten supralabials up to angle of jaw on each side. NCBS-BH 688, NCBS-BH 689 and BNHS 2539 with seven supralabials up to midorbit on each side, NCBS-BH 686 and BNHS 2538 with six, and BNHS 25340 and BNHS 2541 with eight supralabials on each side up to midorbit. Tubercles in paravertebral rows varies from 18 in NCBS-BH 688 to 25 in BNHS 2539; NCBS-BH 687 and NCBS-BH 688 have 11 rows of dorsal tubercles, NCBS-BH 686, NCBS-BH 689, and BNHS 2538 have ten and BNHS 2539, BNHS 2540, and BNHS 2541 have 14 rows of dorsal tubercles. Ventral scale counts in longitudinal and transverse series vary from 128 in BNHS 2538 to 139 in BNHS 2539, and 20 in BNHS 2538 and to 26 in BNHS 2541 respectively. Four male paratypes, NCBS-BH 687, NCBS-BH 689, BNHS 2538, BNHS 2541 have three femoral pores and another male paratype NCBS-BH 688 has four femoral pores on each side. Three paratypes—NCBS-BH687, NCBS-BH 688 and BNHS 2538 with incomplete tail; five paratypes, NCBS-BH 686, BNHS 2539, BNHS 2540, NCBS-BH 689, and BNHS 2541 with complete tail, slightly longer than body (TL/ SVL 1.16, 1.19 and 1.10 respectively) and NCBS-BH 689 and BNHS 2541 with tails slightly shorter than body (TL/ SVL 0.98 and 0.77).</p><p>Distribution and natural history. Cnemaspis koynaensis sp. nov. is so far known only from the vicinity of Koyna Wildlife Sanctuary, Satara, Maharashtra at elevations between ca. 800–1100 m asl. (Fig. 1). The species was encountered during two days of fieldwork in the semi-evergreen forest patches and on exposed lateritic plateau (Fig. 11A). Male holotype (NCBS-BH 685) and two male paratypes (NCBS-BH 687 &amp; NCBS-BH 688) were collected from tree holes below ~ 3 m height along a seasonal stream during the daytime (1500h). Two female paratypes (BNHS 2539 &amp; BNHS 2540) and a subadult male (NCBS-BH 689) were collected from under pile of rocks on an exposed lateritic plateau. Sympatric lizards at the type locality include Hemidactylus frenatus Duméril &amp; Bibron, Hemidactylus sp., Eutropis carinata (Schneider), Eutropis macularia (Blyth), and Lygosoma punctata (Gmelin), Ophisops beddomei (Jerdon), Monilesaurus rouxii (Duméril &amp; Bibron) and Calotes versicolor (Daudin) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BC118799FFBBFF98FF628BC6E376FE8D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khandekar, Akshay;Thackeray, Tejas;Agarwal, Ishan	Khandekar, Akshay, Thackeray, Tejas, Agarwal, Ishan (2019): Two more new species of Cnemaspis Strauch, 1887 (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from the northern Western Ghats, Maharashtra, India. Zootaxa 4656 (1): 43-70, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4656.1.2
BC118799FFB3FF87FF628A8BE520F951.text	BC118799FFB3FF87FF628A8BE520F951.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cnemaspis amba Khandekar & Thackeray & Agarwal 2019	<div><p>Cnemaspis amba sp. nov.</p><p>Figs. 6 C&amp;D, 7–10; Table 5 &amp; 6.</p><p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 061BFD2D-8463-4B35-96C0-F00C244BFD9F</p><p>Holotype. NCBS-BH690 (VG 0407), SVL 33.1 mm, adult male; collected near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.796&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=16.928" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.796/lat 16.928)">Kokan Darshan Point</a>, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.796&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=16.928" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.796/lat 16.928)">Manoli village</a>, near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.796&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=16.928" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.796/lat 16.928)">Amba</a> (16.928° N 73.796° E; ca. 820 m asl.), <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=73.796&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=16.928" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 73.796/lat 16.928)">Kolhapur District</a>, Maharashtra, India, by Akshay Khandekar and Abhilash Kadam, on 27 March 2018.</p><p>Paratypes. BNHS 2542 (VG 0409), SVL 29.3 mm, adult male; NCBS-BH691 (VG 0408), SVL 32.7 mm, adult female; same collection data as holotype, BNHS 2543 (AK 581), SVL 31.6 mm, BNHS 2544 (AK 582), SVL 30.7 mm, adult females; same location data as holotype, collected by Swapnil Pawar and Tejas Thackeray, on 12 September 2018 .</p><p>Etymology. The specific epithet is a toponym for Amba in Kolhapur District of Maharashtra, the type and only known locality for this species.</p><p>Suggested Common Name. Amba dwarf gecko</p><p>Diagnosis and comparison with Indian congeners: A small-sized Cnemaspis, SVL less than 34.0 mm (n =5). Dorsal pholidosis heterogeneous, weakly keeled, granular scales intermixed with large, strongly keeled, conical tubercles, 11–14 longitudinal rows, 17–22 tubercles in paravertebral rows; spine-like scales absent on flanks; ventral scales on belly smooth, subimbricate, 22–24 scales across the mid-body; 141–149 longitudinal scales between mental to anterior border of cloaca; subdigital scansors smooth, entire, unnotched; lamellae under fourth digit of pes 18–20; males with two or three femoral pores on each thigh, separated by 24–26 poreless scales; dorsal side of tail with enlarged, strongly keeled, conical tubercles forming whorls; subcaudals smooth, not enlarged.</p><p>Cnemaspis amba sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Indian congeners on the basis of the following differing or non-overlapping characters: spine-like scales absent on flanks (versus present on flanks in C. amboliensis, C. assamensis, C. flaviventralis, C. goaensis, C. jerdonii, C. koynaensis sp. nov. C. littoralis, C. monticola, C. mysoriensis and C. nilagirica); scales on dorsal aspect of trunk heterogeneous (versus homogeneous in C. adii, C. assamensis, C. australis, C. boiei, C. indica, C. jerdonii, C. kolhapurensis, C. littoralis, C. mysoriensis, C. nilagirica and C. sisparensis); original tail with smooth imbricate median row of unenlarged subcaudals (versus smooth enlarged median row of subcaudals in C. adii, C. agarwali, C. boiei, C. goaensis, C. gracilis, C. heteropholis, C. indica, C. jerdonii, C. kolhapurensis, C. nairi, C. nilagirica, C. ornata, C. shevaroyensis, C. sisparensis, C. thackerayi, and C. wynadensis; C. amboliensis, C. australis, and C. goaensis with keeled subcaudals); absence of keeled scales on the venter or gular regions (versus keeled scales on the venter or gular region in C. australis, C. monticola and C. nilagirica); males lacking precloacal pores and having two or three femoral pores on each side, separated by 24–26 poreless scales (versus only precloacal pores present in C. anamudiensis, C. beddomei, C. maculicollis, C. nairi, C. ornata; males with both femoral and precloacal pores in C. adii, C. agarwali, C. amboliensis, C. australis, C. goaensis; C. gracilis, C. mysoriensis, C. otai, C. shevaroyensis, C. thackerayi, C. yercaudensis; and males with a continuous series of 26–28 precloacal-femoral pores in C. kolhapurensis; males without femoral and precloacal pores in C. assamensis; males with four femoral pores in C. girii, eight in C. jerdonii, six in C. heteropholis, four or five in C. kottiyoorensis, and C. limayei, 14–18 in C. littoralis, seven or eight in C. sisparensis, 4–6 in C. wynadensis .</p><p>C. amba sp. nov. morphologically similar to C. ajijae, C. girii, and C. mahabali; from which it can be distinguished by having 22–24 ventral scales across the mid-body (versus 29–30 in C. ajijae; 26–28 in C. girii; 26–27 in C. mahabali); by having 141–149 longitudinal ventral scales (versus 131–134 in C. ajijae; 133–139 in C. girii; 121–125 in C. mahabali); presence of enlarged tubercle row on lower flanks (versus enlarged tubercle row absent on lower flanks in C. ajijae, C. girii, and C. mahabali). Additionally, C. amba sp. nov. is 19.3 % divergent from C. ajijae; 11.3 % divergent from C. girii and 11.0 % divergent from C. mahabali in uncorrected pairwise ND2 sequence divergence (Table 2).</p><p>Description of the holotype. Adult male in good state of preservation except for a 2.5 mm long incision in the ventral side of the mid-body for liver tissue sample (Fig. 7). SVL 33.1 mm, head short (HL/ SVL 0.25), wide (HW / HL 0.63), not strongly depressed (HD /HL 0.40), distinct from neck. Loreal region slightly inflated, canthus rostralis not prominent. Snout half of head length (ES /HL 0.49), longer than eye diameter (ED / ES 0.38); scales on snout and canthus rostralis large, weakly keeled, juxtaposed; larger than those on forehead and interorbital region; occipital and temporal region with much smaller granules, intermixed with larger, roughly rounded, tubercles (Fig. 8A). Eye small (ED /HL 0.18); with round pupil; orbit with extra-brillar fringe scales that are largest anteriorly; supraciliaries not elongate. Ear-opening deep, vertical, small (EL /HL 0.05); eye to ear distance greater than diameter of eye (EE / ED 1.81) (Fig. 8C). Rostral much wider (1.5 mm) than long (0.6 mm), incompletely divided dorsally by a strongly developed rostral groove for more than half of its length; single enlarged supranasal on each side, roughly similar in size to postnasals, separated from each other by marginally smaller single internasal and a two much smaller scales on the snout; rostral in contact with first supralabial, nasal, supranasal and internasal; nostrils oval, each surrounded by postnasals, supranasal, rostral and first supralabial; two row of scales separate the orbit from the supralabials (Fig. 8C). Mental enlarged, subtriangular, slightly wider (1.7 mm) than long (1.4 mm); two pairs of postmentals, first pair large, roughly rectangular, a single enlarged gular scale prevents contact of left and right first postmentals, bordered by mental, first infralabial, second postmentals and two enlarged chin scales; second postmentals slightly smaller than first postmentals, bordered by first and second infralabials, first postmentals and four enlarged chin scales; three enlarged gular scale prevents contact of left and right second postmentals; chin scales bordering postmentals juxtaposed and flattened, smooth, smaller than second postmentals, rest granular, much smaller, smooth; Infralabials bordered below by a row of slightly enlarged scales, decreasing in size posteriorly (Fig. 8B). Supralabials to angle of jaw nine (on left) and seven (on right), and seven (on left) and five (on right) at midorbit; first supralabial largest, decreasing in size posteriorly; eight infralabials to angle of jaw on each side, and six (on left) and five (on right) at mid-orbit position; first infralabial largest, decreasing in size posteriorly (Fig. 8C). Extra-brillar fringe scales 14–16 on each side, interorbital scale rows across narrowest point of frontal eight; 27–29 scale rows between left and right supraciliaries at mid-orbit (Fig 8A).</p><p>Body relatively slender(BW / SVL 0.19), trunk less than half of SVL (AGL / SVL 0.39) without ventrolateral folds and spine-like scales on lower flank. Dorsal scales on trunk heterogeneous, weakly keeled, granular scales intermixed with much larger, strongly keeled, conical tubercles. Tubercles in approximately 12 longitudinal rows at mid-body; 20 tubercles in paravertebral row from above forelimb insertion to the hind limb insertion; scales on nape slightly smaller than those on paravertebral rows, smaller still on occiput. Ventral scales slightly larger than granular scales on dorsum, those on belly smooth, subimbricate, slightly rounded, subequal from chest to vent; ventral scale rows across mid-body 22; 145 scales from mental to anterior border of cloacal opening; scales on pectoral region slightly smaller than those on belly, flat and subimbricate, smaller still on throat; gular region with much smaller, flattened granules with those on chin bordering postmentals, enlarged, juxtaposed and flattened (Fig. 6D &amp; 8B). Precloacal pores absent, three femoral pores on left and two on right side separated by 24 poreless scales (Fig. 8D).</p><p>Scales on palm and sole, smooth, flat and roughly circular; scales on dorsal aspect of manus and pes heterogenous, upper arm slightly larger than those on dorsum, strongly keeled and subimbricate; those near forelimb insertion, much smaller, granular, weakly keeled; scales on dorsal aspect of forearm smaller than those on upper arm, weakly keeled, flat and roughly rounded; scales on elbow weakly keeled, subimbricate and similar in size to those on upper arm; dorsal aspect of hand predominantly bearing small, flattened, weakly keeled and imbricate scales. Ventral aspect of upper arm with smooth, subimbricate scales; forearm and wrist with larger, weakly keeled, subimbricate scales. Scales on dorsal aspect of thigh larger than those on mid-body dorsum, strongly keeled, imbricate except those near hind-limb insertion which are much smaller, weakly keeled and subimbricate. Scales on dorsal side of knee and shank slightly smaller than those on dorsum of thigh, weakly keeled, subimbricate; dorsal side of foot predominantly bearing flattened, strongly keeled, imbricate scales; scales on ventral aspect of thigh and shank similar in size of mid-body ventral scales, smooth and subimbricate. (Fig. 7 A&amp;B). Forelimbs and hind-limbs moderately slender, long (LAL / SVL 0.14), (CL/ SVL 0.17); digits long, with a strong slightly recurved claws, distinctly inflected, distal portions laterally compressed conspicuously. Series of unpaired subdigital lamellae on basal portion of digits, separated from narrower distal subdigital lamellae at first interphalangeal joint; proximal lamellae series: 2–4–5–5–4 (right manus; Fig. 8E), 2–4–5–6–4 (right pes; Fig. 8F), 2–4–5–5–4 (left manus), 2–4–5–6–3(left pes); distal lamellae series: 8– 9–12–13–10 (right manus; Fig. 8E), 9–10–12–13 –12 (right pes; Fig. 8F), 8– 9–12–13–10 (left manus), 9–10–12–12 –13 (left pes). Relative length of digits (measurements in mm in parentheses): IV (3.3)&gt; III (3.1)&gt; II (2.9)&gt; V (2.8)&gt; I (2.0) (left manus); IV (4.3)&gt; V (3.8)&gt; III (3.7)&gt; II (3.2)&gt; I (1.8) (left pes).</p><p>Tail almost entire except the tip, which is missing, cylindrical, relatively slender, flattened beneath, base distinctly swollen when viewed ventrally, total tail length 29.3 mm (Fig. 7 C&amp;D). Dorsal scales at tail base granular, weakly keeled, similar in size and shape to those on mid-body dorsum, gradually becoming larger, flatter, pointed, subimbricate posteriorly, intermixed with slightly enlarged, strongly keeled, conical tubercles forming whorls; 6–9 tubercles on first 2–5 whorls. Scales on ventral aspect roughly twice the size to those on dorsal, imbricate, smooth, without a series of enlarged sub-caudal scales; those on tail base slightly smaller, imbricate and smooth, a single enlarged, keeled, postcloacal spur on each side (Fig. 8D).</p><p>Colouration in life. (Fig. 10A) Dorsal ground colour of head, body, limbs and tail dull brown-grey; head with scattered darker brown markings, brille dull orange pupil black, iris golden-red. Radiating line from orbit forming an indistinct preorbital streak on snout; dull orange and dark grey alternating bands on labials; two indistinct brown postorbital streaks, the upper merging with its counterpart from the other orbit to form an indistinct zig-zag band on occiput, small orange spots on occiput and temporal region. A single large central black ocellus outlined by lighter tubercles on nape. Dorsum with three light vertebral blotches outlined anteriorly by brown markings between limb insertions; smaller orange and yellow spots on rest of dorsum and flank; four indistinct, small orange-yellow blotches on flank in a straight line; spines on the lower flank yellow. Dorsum of limbs with light orange spots and indistinct brown bands, digits with alternating dark and orange bands; dorsum of original portion of tail with orange tubercles and indistinct brown bands, regenerated portion grey. Ventral surfaces off-white, mottled with brown on gular region, belly, under limbs and tail base, no dark markings on underside of tail; postcloacal spur and spines on the lateral aspect of the tail close to the cloaca light orange.</p><p>TABLE 5. Mensural (in mm) data for the type series of Cnemaspis amba sp. nov. Abbreviations are listed in Materials and Methods. * = tail incomplete.</p><p>Cnemaspis amba sp. nov.</p><p>Variation and additional information from type series. Mensural data for the type series is given in Table 5. There are three females and one male specimens ranging in size from 29.3 mm to 32.7 mm. All paratypes resemble the holotype except as follows: the number of lamellae on digit I of the manus ranges from 10 or 11 and on digit IV from 15–18; on digit I of the pes ranges from 11, on digit IV from 18–20 and on digit V from 15–18. NCBS-BH 691, BNHS 2542 and BNHS 2544 with nine and BNHS 2543 with eight supralabials on either side up to angle of jaw; NCBS-BH691 and NCBS-BH642 with six and BNHS 2543 with seven supralabials on either side up to midorbit, and BNHS 2544 has seven supralabials on left and eight on right up to midorbit; BNHS 2542 and BNHS 2544 with eight infralabials on either side up to angle of jaw, and NCBS-BH691 has seven infralabials on left and eight on right side whereas BNHS 2543 with eight infralabials on left and seven on right side up to angle of jaw. NCBS- BH691 and BNHS 2542 have 20 tubercles in paravertebral rows, and NCBS-BH643 and BNHS 2544 have 22 and 17 tubercles in paravertebral rows respectively; NCBS-BH691 and BNHS 2544 have 12 rows of dorsal tubercles and BNHS 2542, and BNHS 2543 have 11 and 14 rows of dorsal tubercles respectively. Ventral scale counts in longitudinal and transverse series vary from 141 in NCBS-BH691 to 149 in BNHS 2542, and 22 in BNHS 2542 to 24 in NCBS-BH691 and BNHS 2543 respectively. Male paratype, NCBS-BH671 has three femoral pores on each thigh and 26 poreless scales between them. Three paratypes—NCBS-BH691, BNHS 2542 and BNHS 2544 with incomplete tail; BNHS 2544 with complete tail, slightly longer than body (TL/ SVL 1.13) .</p><p>Distribution and natural history. Cnemaspis amba sp. nov. is so far known only from the type locality (Kokan Darshan Point, Manoli village, Amba) at an elevation of ca. 820 m asl. (Fig. 1). This species was encountered during a few hours of fieldwork along a perennial stream in daytime (1500h) on moss-covered rocks and trees below ~ 2 m height. In late-March, the male holotype (NCBS-BH 690) and a female paratype (NCBS-BH 691) were collected from inside two adjoining crevices on a laterite rock. Some crevices in the area also contained a few hatched and unhatched Cnemaspis eggs. On a subsequent visit to the same locality in mid-monsoon, we observed that the crevices in the rocks were filled with rain water and occupied by terrestrial crabs ( Ghatiana sp.), and individuals of Cnemaspis amba sp. nov. were predominantly on moss covered tree trunks. Sympatric lizards at the type locality include Hemidactylus frenatus, Hemidactylus sp., Cyrtodactylus (Geckoella) deccanensis (Günther), Eutropis carinata, E. macularia, Lygosoma punctata, Monilesaurus rouxii, and Calotes versicolor .</p><p>Miscellaneous notes on NWG Cnemaspis . The GPS coordinates for the type localities of Cnemaspis ajijae, C. limayei and C. mahabali (Sayyed et al. 2018) do not match the given localities and elevation. The corrected coordinates for the three species are as follows (AS, pers. comm.): C. ajijae (17.9263°N, 73.6566°E), C. limayei (16.3678°N, 73.8044°E) and C. mahabali (18.4582°N, 73.393°E).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BC118799FFB3FF87FF628A8BE520F951	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khandekar, Akshay;Thackeray, Tejas;Agarwal, Ishan	Khandekar, Akshay, Thackeray, Tejas, Agarwal, Ishan (2019): Two more new species of Cnemaspis Strauch, 1887 (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from the northern Western Ghats, Maharashtra, India. Zootaxa 4656 (1): 43-70, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4656.1.2
