The remote oceanic Gulf of Guinea islands of São Tomé and Príncipe are home to a highly endemic herpetofauna, which has become the focus of modern, on-going scientific analysis only during the past decade. Until now, the endemic Hemidactylus greeffi Bocage 1886 (Greeff's giant gecko) has been considered to occur on both islands. Herein, we employ both new and previously published molecular data, along with differences in morphological characters, to demonstrate that the Príncipe populations are a full species distinct from H. greeffi. We describe the new species and restrict the range of H. greeffi to the island of São Tomé. The original unnumbered holotype of H. greeffii held in the Museu Bocage was destroyed in Lisbon and we have been unable to determine the collection provenance of unnumbered material treated by subsequent authors. We therefore designate a neotype for H. greeffi from California Academy of Science collections and provide morphological information on that species additional to that of earlier workers, based upon 14 specimens collected in various localities on São Tomé during the past decade.
Hemidactylus principensis is a species of geckos in the family Gekkonidae. The species is endemic to the island of Príncipe in São Tomé and Príncipe.[1] The species was named by Elizabeth C. Miller, Anna B. Sellas and Robert C. Drewes in 2012, when it was split from Hemidactylus greeffii, native to nearby larger island of São Tomé.[2] It was observed on a beach below São Joaquim.[1]
Hemidactylus principensis is a species of geckos in the family Gekkonidae. The species is endemic to the island of Príncipe in São Tomé and Príncipe. The species was named by Elizabeth C. Miller, Anna B. Sellas and Robert C. Drewes in 2012, when it was split from Hemidactylus greeffii, native to nearby larger island of São Tomé. It was observed on a beach below São Joaquim.