Xantusia

Xantusia
Xantusia vigilis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Xantusiidae
Subfamily: Xantusiinae
Genus: Xantusia
Baird, 1859[1]

Xantusia (/zænˈtziə/) is one of three genera of night lizards (family Xantusiidae). Species of Xantusia are small to medium-sized, viviparous (live-bearing) lizards found in the U.S. Southwest and in northern Mexico. These lizards display morphological adaptations to specific microhabitats.[2] They occupy rock crevices and decaying plants. Rock dwellers generally have brighter coloration, longer limbs and digits, and larger size than plant dwellers, which are generally duller, smaller, and have shorter limbs.
Species of the genus Xantusia are remarkably disjunct, with populations scattered throughout the deserts and mountains of the far western borderlands with only a handful of recorded cases of interspecific allopatry. The genus contains at least seven distinct cases of morphological convergence to the rock dwelling ecomorph in Arizona, California, Baja California, and Central Mexico.[3]

  1. ^ Xantusia vigilis at the Reptarium.cz Reptile Database
  2. ^ Bezy RL (1967). "Variation, distribution, and taxonomic status of the Arizona night lizard (Xantusia arizonae)". Copeia 1967: 653–661.
  3. ^ Noonan BP, Pramuk JB, Bezy RL, Sinclair EA, de Queiroz K, Sites JW Jr (2013). "Phylogenetic relationships within the lizard clade Xantusiidae: Using trees and divergence times to address evolutionary questions at multiple levels". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 69 (1), 109–122.