Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox
Phelsuma is a large genus of geckos in the family Gekkonidae. Species in the genus Phelsuma are commonly referred to as day geckos.
Some day geckos are seriously endangered and some are common, but all Phelsuma species are CITES Appendix II listed. Little is known about trade in day geckos,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> but the IUCN considers it a threat to some species. Some species are captive-bred.<ref>Breeding Endangered Geckos, editor's interview with Matt Schaefer, July 23, 2013</ref>
TaxonomyEdit
The genus itself is thought to have originated anywhere between the Late Cretaceous to the mid-Eocene (43 to 75 mya), as that is when its lineage is known to have diverged from the one containing the Namaqua day gecko (Rhoptropella), although it is unknown how closely related both genera are. The crown group containing all recent species is thought to have originated in the early Oligocene, about 30 million years ago, with the most basal of them being the isolated Andaman day gecko (P. andamanensis), which diverged from all other species shortly after the crown group originated.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Most of the other divergence among species in areas of the Western Indian Ocean such as the Seychelles is thought to have occurred in the Neogene.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
DescriptionEdit
In contrast to most other gecko species, day geckos of the genus Phelsuma are active mainly during the day. Other diurnal geckos include species of the genera Lygodactylus and Gonatodes. Like most other geckos, day geckos lack eyelids, instead having rounded pupils and a clear, fixed plate covering their eyes which they clean with their tongues. Many species have bright green, red, and blue colors which make them popular terrarium or vivarium pets. These brilliant colors play a role in intraspecies recognition and also serve as camouflage.
The total length (including tail) of the different Phelsuma species varies between about Template:Convert, but the extinct Rodrigues giant day gecko was even larger. Day geckos have toe pads consisting of tiny lamellae which allow them to walk on plain vertical and inverted surfaces like bamboo or glass. The inner toe on each foot is vestigial. Males have well-developed femoral pores on the undersurface of their rear limbs. These pores are less developed or absent in females. Females often have well-developed endolymphatic chalk sacs on the sides of their necks. These sacs store calcium, which is needed for egg production. Those eggs can often be seen through the ventral surface of the female's body shortly before they are laid. The hatchlings reach sexual maturity between six and 12 months old. Smaller species may live up to 10 years, whereas the larger species have been reported to live more than 20 years in captivity.
Distribution and habitatEdit
Day geckos inhabit the islands of the south-west part of the Indian Ocean. The exceptions are Phelsuma andamanense, which is endemic to the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal, and Phelsuma dubia, which is also found on the East Coast of mainland Africa, although it possibly was introduced there. Most Phelsumas species are found in Mauritius and Madagascar. Some species are found on neighboring island groups, including the Mascarenes, Seychelles, and Comoros. Due to human introduction, they are also often found on some of the Hawaiian Islands, including the Big Island, Maui and Kauai, and the state of Florida, where they were introduced as a form of pest control. The different Phelsuma species can be found from sea level up to 2,300 meters. Most day geckos are arboreal. They inhabit, amongst others, coconut palms and banana trees, but can also be found near human settlements, in gardens, on fences, houses, and huts. An exception, Phelsuma barbouri, is a terrestrial species.
DietEdit
Day geckos feed on various insects and other invertebrates in the wild. They also eat nectar, pollen, and occasionally soft, ripe and sweet fruits such as bananas.
In captivity, such a diet is simulated. Insects which may be used include: (wingless) fruit flies, various flies, wax moths, crickets, small super worms, small butter worms and mealworms. Fruit, which is required a few times a week, may be small pieces of papaya, banana, or other sweet fruit and also commercial gecko nectars.
In 2008 a BBC film crew took footage of a day gecko successfully begging a planthopper for honeydew.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
EtymologyEdit
The genus Phelsuma was first described in 1825 by the British zoologist John Edward Gray, who named it after the Dutch physician Murk van Phelsum.<ref>Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. Template:ISBN. (Phelsuma, p. 206).</ref>
ClassificationEdit
(P. abbotti chekei)
(P. astriata astriata)
(P. borbonicaca)
(P. cepediana)
The genus consists of about 70 known species and subspecies.
Two Phelsuma species (Phelsuma gigas and Phelsuma edwardnewtoni), both of which were endemic to the Mascarene island of Rodrigues, are now considered to be extinct, probably due to the destruction of their environments by human settlers and their domestic animals. Many day gecko species are endangered today for similar reasons: an increasing percentage of their natural habitat, especially tropical forest, is being destroyed by human activity.
- File:Phelsuma dorsivittata 184633674 (cropped).jpgStriped day gecko (P. dorsivittata)File:P-flavigularis (cropped).jpgYellow-throated day gecko (P. flavigularis)File:Phelsuma gouldi 108484637 (cropped).jpgAnja day gecko (P. gouldi)File:Madagascar giant day gecko (Phelsuma grandis) Nosy Komba (cropped).jpgMadagascar giant day gecko (P. grandis)File:Gecko Phelsuma klemmeri (cropped).jpgYellow-headed day gecko (P. klemmeri)File:Phelsuma lineata 184622407 (cropped).jpgLined day gecko (P. lineata)File:Ornate Day Gecko in Bras d'Eau NP - Phelsuma ornata (cropped).jpgMauritius ornate day gecko
(P. ornata)File:Phelsuma quadriocellata quadriocellata 3890357 (cropped).jpgPeacock day gecko (P. quadriocellata)Phelsuma abbotti Template:SmallFile:Phelsuma standingi 50296046 (cropped).jpgStanding's day gecko (P. standingi)- Phelsuma abbotti abbotti Template:Small – Aldabra Island day gecko
- Phelsuma abbotti chekei Template:Small – Cheke's day gecko
- Phelsuma abbotti sumptio Template:Small – Assumption Island day gecko
- Phelsuma andamanensis Template:Small – Andaman Islands day gecko
- Phelsuma antanosy Template:Small
- Phelsuma astriata Template:Small – Seychelles day gecko
- Phelsuma astriata astovei Template:Small
- Phelsuma astriata astriata Template:Small – Seychelles small day gecko
- Phelsuma astriata semicarinata Template:Small
- Phelsuma barbouri Template:Small – Barbour's day gecko
- Phelsuma berghofi Template:Small
- Phelsuma borai Template:Small
- Phelsuma borbonica Template:Small
- Phelsuma borbonica agalegae Template:Small – Agalega day gecko
- Phelsuma borbonica borbonica Template:Small – Reunion Island day gecko
- Phelsuma borbonica mater Template:Small
- Phelsuma breviceps Template:Small
- Phelsuma cepediana Template:Small – blue-tailed day gecko
- Phelsuma comorensis Template:Small
- Phelsuma dorsivittata Template:Small
- Phelsuma dubia Template:Small – dull day gecko, Zanzibar day gecko
- Template:DaggerPhelsuma edwardnewtoni Template:Small – Rodrigues day gecko (extinct, last seen 1917)
- Phelsuma flavigularis Template:Small – yellow-throated day gecko
- Template:DaggerPhelsuma gigas Template:Small – Rodrigues giant day gecko (extinct, last seen 1842)
- Phelsuma gouldi Template:Small
- Phelsuma grandis Template:Small – Madagascar giant day gecko
- Phelsuma guentheri Template:Small – Round Island day gecko
- Phelsuma guimbeaui Template:Small – orange-spotted day gecko, Mauritius lowland forest day gecko
- Phelsuma guttata Template:Small – speckled day gecko
- Phelsuma hielscheri Template:Small
- Phelsuma hoeschi Template:Small
- Phelsuma inexpectata Template:Small – Reunion Island ornate day gecko
- Phelsuma kely Template:Small
- Phelsuma klemmeri Template:Small – yellow-headed day gecko
- Phelsuma kochi Template:Small – Koch's day gecko, Koch's giant day gecko, Madagascar day gecko, Maevatanana day gecko
- Phelsuma laticauda Template:Small – broad-tailed day gecko
- Phelsuma laticauda angularis Template:Small
- Phelsuma laticauda laticauda Template:Small – gold dust day gecko
- Phelsuma lineata Template:Small
- Phelsuma madagascariensis Template:Small
- Phelsuma madagascariensis boehmei Template:Small – Boehme's giant day gecko
- Phelsuma madagascariensis madagascariensis Template:Small – Madagascar day gecko
- Phelsuma malamakibo Template:Small <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Phelsuma masohoala Template:Small <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Phelsuma modesta Template:Small – modest day gecko <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Phelsuma mutabilis Template:Small – thicktail day gecko
- Phelsuma nigristriata Template:Small – island day gecko
- Phelsuma ornata Template:Small – Mauritius ornate day gecko
- Phelsuma parkeri Template:Small – Pemba Island day gecko
- Phelsuma parva Template:Small
- Phelsuma pasteuri Template:Small – Pasteur's day gecko
- Phelsuma pronki Template:Small
- Phelsuma punctulata Template:Small – striped day gecko
- Phelsuma pusilla Template:Small
- Phelsuma pusilla hallmanni Template:Small – Hallmann's day gecko
- Phelsuma pusilla pusilla Template:Small
- Phelsuma quadriocellata Template:Small – peacock day gecko
- Phelsuma quadriocellata quadriocellata Template:Small – four-spotted day gecko
- Phelsuma quadriocellata bimaculata Template:Small
- Phelsuma quadriocellata lepida Template:Small
- Phelsuma ravenala Template:Small
- Phelsuma robertmertensi Template:Small – Robert Mertens's day gecko
- Phelsuma roesleri Template:Small
- Phelsuma rosagularis Template:Small – Mauritius upland forest day gecko
- Phelsuma seippi Template:Small – Seipp's day gecko
- Phelsuma serraticauda Template:Small – flat-tailed day gecko
- Phelsuma standingi Template:Small – Standing's day gecko
- Phelsuma sundbergi Template:Small – Praslin Island day gecko
- Phelsuma sundbergi ladiguensis Template:Small – La Digue day gecko
- Phelsuma sundbergi longinsulae Template:Small – Mahé day gecko
- Phelsuma sundbergi sundbergi Template:Small – Seychelles giant day gecko
- Phelsuma vanheygeni Template:Small
- Phelsuma v-nigra Template:Small – Indian day gecko
- Phelsuma v-nigra anjouanensis Template:Small – Anjouan Island day gecko
- Phelsuma v-nigra comoraegrandensis Template:Small – Grand Comoro day gecko
- Phelsuma v-nigra v-nigra Template:Small
Nota bene: A binomial authority or trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species or subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Phelsuma.
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
Further readingEdit
- Berghof H-P (2016). Taggeckos der Gattung Phelsuma: Lebensweise – Haltung – Nachzucht. Münster, Germany: Natur und Tier Verlag. 192 pp. Template:ISBN. (in German).
- Template:Cite book
- Gehring P-S, Crottini A, Glaw F, Hauswaldt S, Ratsoavina FM (2010). "Notes on the natural history, distribution and malformations of day geckos (Phelsuma) from Madagascar". Herpetology Notes 3: 321-327.
- Glaw F, Rösler H (2015). "Taxonomic checklist of the day geckos of the genera Phelsuma Gray, 1825 and Rhoptropella Hewitt, 1937 (Squamata: Gekkonidae)". Vertebrate Zoology 65 (2): 247–283.
- Gray JE (1825). "A Synopsis of the Genera of Reptiles and Amphibia, with a Description of some new Species". Annals of Philosophy. New Series [Series 2] 10: 193-217. (Phelsuma, new genus, p. 199).
- Rocha S, Rösler H, Gehring P-S, Glaw F, Posada D, Harris DJ, Vences M (2010). "Phylogenetic systematics of day geckos, genus Phelsuma, based on molecular and morphological data (Squamata: Gekkonidae)". Zootaxa 2429: 1–28.