Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Morphological variation of Emoia murphyi (Lacertilia:
Scincidae) on islands of the southwest Pacific
George R. Zug*, B.J. Gill+
We examined variation in measurements and scalation of 114 specimens of
Murphy's tree skink
Emoia murphyi from five island groups of the
southwest Pacific. In the largest sample (Niuafo'ou) males were significantly
longer than females. Populations from Futuna, Samoa, Niuafo'ou, Vava'u and
Ha'apai showed little morphological divergence, and there were no geographic
trends in scalation. We conclude that the various populations are conspecific.
The lack of morphological discontinuity suggests that the lizards dispersed
between the far-flung island groups recently, and makes more likely the
possibility that Polynesian seafaring rather than natural spread was the agent
of dispersal. The source population--whether within or beyond the known
distribution of
E. murphyi--is at present indeterminate.
Keywords: southwest Pacific, Samoa, Tonga, Futuna, Emoia murphyi,
Reptilia, Scincidae, measurements, scalation, dispersal
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 27, Number 2, June 1997, pp 235-242
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (439K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
This year's abstracts |
Journal home page |
All abstracts |
Publishing home page