Galliwasp

The galliwasps are a group of anguid lizards from the genera Celestus and Diploglossus containing the following living species, and one extinct species.[1]

Species

Celestus

  • Celestus adercus Savage, Lips & Ibáñez, 2008
  • Celestus agasepsoides (Thomas, 1971)
  • Celestus anelpistus (Schwartz, Graham & Duval, 1979)
  • Celestus badius Cope, 1868
  • Celestus barbouri Grant, 1940
  • Celestus bivittatus (Boulenger, 1895)
  • Celestus carraui (Incháustegui, 1985)
  • Celestus costatus (Cope, 1862)
  • Celestus crusculus (Garman, 1887)
  • Celestus curtissi Grant, 1951
  • Celestus cyanochloris Cope, 1894
  • Celestus darlingtoni Cochran, 1939
  • Celestus duquesneyi Grant, 1940
  • Celestus enneagrammus (Cope, 1860)
  • Celestus fowleri (Schwartz, 1971)
  • Celestus haetianus (Cochran, 1927)
  • Celestus hewardi Gray, 1845
  • Celestus hylaius Savage & Lips, 1993
  • Celestus macrotus Thomas & Hedges, 1989
  • Celestus marcanoi (Schwartz & Incháustegui, 1976)
  • Celestus microblepharis (Underwood, 1959)
  • Celestus montanus (K.P. Schmidt, 1933)
  • Celestus occiduus (Shaw, 1802) - (extinct)
  • Celestus orobius Savage & Lips, 1993
  • Celestus rozellae (H.M. Smith, 1942)
  • Celestus scansorius McCranie & Wilson, 1996
  • Celestus sepsoides (Gray, 1852)
  • Celestus stenurus (Cope, 1862)
  • Celestus warreni (Schwartz, 1970)

Nota bene: A binomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than Celestus.

Diploglossus

  • Diploglossus atitlanensis (H.M. Smith, 1950)
  • Diploglossus bilobatus (O'Shaughnessy, 1874) – O'Shaughnessy's galliwasp
  • Diploglossus delasagra (Cocteau, 1838)Cuban galliwasp
  • Diploglossus fasciatus (Gray, 1831) – banded galliwasp
  • Diploglossus garridoi Thomas & Hedges, 1998
  • Diploglossus ingridae Werler & Campbell, 2004
  • Diploglossus legnotus Campbell & Camarillo, 1994 – Campbell's galliwasp
  • Diploglossus lessonae Peracca, 1890Brazilian galliwasp
  • Diploglossus microcephalus (Hallowell, 1856) – smallhead galliwasp
  • Diploglossus microlepis (Gray, 1831) – small-lipped galliwasp
  • Diploglossus millepunctatus O'Shaughnessy, 1874 – dotted galliwasp
  • Diploglossus monotropis (Kuhl, 1820) – Costa Rican rainbow stripe galliwasp
  • Diploglossus montisilvestris Myers, 1973
  • Diploglossus montisserrati Underwood, 1964Montserrat galliwasp
  • Diploglossus nigropunctatus Barbour & Shreve, 1937 – punctuate galliwasp
  • Diploglossus owenii A.M.C. Duméril & Bibron, 1839Owen's galliwasp
  • Diploglossus pleii A.M.C. Duméril & Bibron, 1839Puerto Rican galliwasp

Nota bene: A binomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than Diploglossus.

gollark: It would undo the transaction and (maybe partially) undo any depending on it.
gollark: If I wanted to make it really annoying for anyone to ever use the cryptocurrency, I could make it so that you could revoke transactions any time after you make them or something.
gollark: Basically, if you enforce a limit, people can just use 192749182478194718471 "accounts" to avoid it, because there's no practical way to not have that.
gollark: And you can't limit per-second output because of Sybil attacks.
gollark: Firstly, time synchronization is a somewhat hard problem so I think cryptocurrencies allow some level of fuzziness with time in case of issues. Secondly, it would not be possible to delete everything it had mined without really weird and exploitable design.

References

  1. The Reptile Database.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.