Varanus darevskii | |
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Drawing of partially reconstructed skull (top view) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Family: | Varanidae |
Genus: | Varanus |
Species: | V. darevskii |
Binomial name | |
Varanus darevskii Levshakova, 1986 | |
Varanus darevskii, also known as the Central Asian monitor, is an extinct species of monitor lizard from the Early Pliocene of Tajikistan, known from a partial skull. V. darevskii might have been a close relative of, and perhaps ancestral to, the modern desert monitor (V. griseus).
Varanus darevskii was described by the Russian palaeontologist Irina Levshakova in 1986, based on a partial skull in comparatively good condition from the Early Pliocene found near the village of Sor in the Sughd Region of Tajikistan. The skull preserved the snout in its entirety, alongside portions of the skull roof and palate. [1]
The species name darevskii honors the Russian zoologist and herpetologist Ilya Darevsky. [2] Levshakova also gave the species a common name, calling it the Central Asian monitor. [3]
The skull of V. darevskii is similar to the modern desert monitor (V. griseus), but differs by having a broader parietal region and a more pointed tip of the snout. Though the fossil is incompletely preserved, it is also possible that the orbits of V. darevskii were larger than those of V. griseus. V. darevskii was slightly smaller than V. griseus (which usually grow to about one meter in length), but had bigger teeth. [1]
Levshakova classified V. darevskii within the Varanus subgenus Psammosaurus (which also contains V. griseus) on the basis of both anatomy and zoogeography. She believed V. darevskii to be closely related, perhaps ancestral, to V. griseus. [1] [4] Levshakova further placed the extinct species V. marathonensis in the same subgenus, arguing that it too was a close relative of V. darevskii. [1] [5] A 2018 analysis found V. marathonensis to fall outside of such a clade with V. griseus, instead being more closely related to eastern Varanus species such as V. flavescens and V. bengalensis . [5]
According to the 2004 reference work Varanoid Lizards of the World by Eric R. Pianka, Dennis King and Ruth Allen King, Levshakova's classification of V. darevskii is sensible and it would not be surprising if V. griseus were a descendant of V. darevskii, although no phylogenetic studies have yet taken V. darevskii into account and confirmed it. [1] A 2016 analysis recovered V. darevskii as belonging to the subgenus Polydaedalus , which includes modern species such as the Nile monitor (V. niloticus), rock monitor (V. albigularis) and savannah monitor (V. exanthematicus). If this classification is correct, V. darevskii would be the first known occurrence of Polydaedalus in western Asia. [6]
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The desert monitor is a species of monitor lizard of the order Squamata found living throughout North Africa and Central and South Asia. The desert monitor is carnivorous, feeding on a wide range of vertebrates and invertebrates.
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The spiny-tailed monitor, also known as the Australian spiny-tailed monitor, the ridge-tailed monitor the Ackie dwarf monitor, and colloquially simply ackie monitor, is an Australian species of lizard belonging to the genus of monitor lizards (Varanus).
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Varanus kordensis, the Biak tree monitor, is a member of the Varanidae family found on Biak Island in Indonesia. It is also known as the Kordo tree monitor. Long considered a subspecies of the emerald tree monitor, most authorities now treat it as a separate species.
Aiolosaurus is an extinct genus of monitor lizard from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. The type and only species, Aiolosaurus oriens, was named in 2000 from Ukhaa Tolgod, a rich fossil site in the Campanian-age Djadochta Formation.
Telmasaurus is an extinct genus of varanoid lizard from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. Fossils have been found from the Djadokha and Barun Goyot Formations that date between the early and middle Campanian stage from approximately 80 to 75 million years ago. The type species Telmasaurus grangeri was named in 1943.
Proplatynotia is an extinct genus of varanoid lizard from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. Fossils have been found in the Barun Goyot Formation, which is mid-Campanian in age. The type and only species, P. longirostrata, was named in 1984.
Saniwa is an extinct genus of varanid lizard that lived during the Eocene epoch. It is known from well-preserved fossils found in the Bridger and Green River Formations of Wyoming, United States. The type species S. ensidens was described in 1870 as the first fossil lizard known from North America. A second species, S.orsmaelensis, is recognised from remains found in Europe. It is a close relative of Varanus, the genus that includes monitor lizards.
Varanus marathonensis, the Samos dragon, is an extinct species of monitor lizard from the middle to late Miocene of Greece and Spain, known from several specimens. A specimen consisting of a partial skull and several vertebrae was named Varanus amnhophilis in 2012 and placed in its own subgenus, Varaneades, but a 2018 study found it to be a junior synonym of Varanus marathonensis. Comparisons with other species of monitor lizards put its size between 60 and 80 cm in length. The fossil was found in the Turolian-age Mytilini Formation on the island of Samos and is currently housed in the American Museum of Natural History.
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Irina Yuryevna Levshakova was a Russian paleontologist, geologist, artist and musician. She is most famous for her deep involvement in the underground rock music scene in Leningrad during the 1980s and 1990s.
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