
Geckolepis is a genus of geckos, commonly referred to as fish scale geckos, which are endemic to Madagascar and the Comoro Islands. They are nocturnal, arboreal, insectivorous lizards, found in primary and secondary forest, as well as degraded habitats. They are best known for their ability to lose their skin and scales when grasped by a predator.
GENUS
Geckolepis es un género de gecos de la familia Gekkonidae.[1] Son gecos nocturnos que se encuentran en la isla de Madagascar. Especies Se reconocen las siguientes tres especies:[2] Geckolepis maculata Peters, 1880 Geckolepis polylepis Boettger, 1893 Geckolepis typica Grandidier, 1867 Referencias ↑ Geckolepis en BioLib ↑ Uetz, P. & Jirí Hošek (ed.). «Geckolepis». Reptile Database. Reptarium. Consultado el 22 de marzo de 2016.
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Geckolepis is a genus of geckos, commonly referred to as fish scale geckos, which are endemic to Madagascar and the Comoro Islands. They are nocturnal, arboreal, insectivorous lizards, found in primary and secondary forest, as well as degraded habitats. They are best known for their ability to lose their skin and scales when grasped by a predator.
== Taxonomy == The genus Geckolepis has difficult taxonomy due to variable pholidosis. Recent taxonomic and genetic investigation have shown that several cryptic species are present in this genus. In 2016, Hawlitschek et al. resurrected G. humbloti from synonymy with G. maculata, as a species endemic to the Comoro Islands. In 2017, Scherz et al. (2017) described G. megalepis from the limestone pinnacle karst formations of Ankarana National Park—this species has larger scales than all other members of the genus, but it was also identified based on its osteology. The taxonomic identity of G. maculata remains uncertain.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).