Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Type: Article
Published: 2008-08-11
Page range: 62–68
Abstract views: 102
PDF downloaded: 2

A 100 million year old gecko with sophisticated adhesive toe pads, preserved in amber from Myanmar

Department of Zoology, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
Department of Zoology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA
Reptilia Gecko Gekkota amber Myanmar Lower Cretaceous adhesive pad

Abstract

A new genus and species of gecko is described from a posterior lower limb and foot, and a partial tail, preserved in Lower Cretaceous amber from Myanmar that is 97–110My old. It appears to be the oldest unequivocal fossil gecko, predating fragmentary skeletal remains from the Upper Cretaceous and being 43–56 My older than Yanatarogecko from the Lower Eocene, previously the oldest known gecko preserved in amber. It also provides firm evidence that gekkotans and possibly gekkonids were in Asia at this time. The Myanmar specimen shows, that the distinctive foot proportions and sophisticated adhesive mechanism, involving pads on the toes with transverse lamellae probably bearing numerous hairlike setae found in many modern geckos, had already evolved around 100My ago. The specimen is very small, even compared with juveniles of the smallest living geckos. However, the high numbers of lamellae on its toe pads suggest it is from a juvenile of a species with relatively large adult body size.

References

  1. Arnold, E.N., Azar, D., Ineich, I. & Nel, A. (2002) The oldest reptile in amber: a 120 million year old lizard from Lebanon. Journal of Zoology (London), 258, 7–10.

    Bauer, A.M., Böhme & W. Weitschat, W. (2005) An Early Eocene gecko from Baltic amber and its implications for the evolution of gecko adhesion. Journal of Zoology (London), 265, 327–332.

    Bauer, A.M. & Sadlier, R.A. (2000) The Herpetofauna of New Caledonia. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, St Louis.

    Böhme, W. (1984) Erstfund eines fossilen Kugelfingergeckos (Sauria: Gekkonidae: Sphaerodactylinae) aus Dominikanischen Bernstein (Oligozän von Hispaniola, Antillen). Salamandra, 20, 212–220.

    Collette, B.B. (1961) Correlations between ecology and morphology in anoline lizards from Havana, Cuba and southern Florida. Bulletin of Comparative Zoology, 125, 137–162.

    Cruickshank, R.D. & Ko, K. (2003) Geology of an amber locality in the Hukawng Valley, northern Myanmar. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, 21, 441–455.

    Gamble, T., Bauer, A.M., Greenbaum, E. & Jackman, T.R. (2008) Evidence for Gondwanan vicariance in an ancient clade of gecko lizards. Journal of Biogeography, 35, 88–104.

    Glossip, D. & Losos, J.B. (1997) Ecological correlates of number of subdigital lamellae in anoles .Herpetologica 53, 192–199.

    Kluge, A.G. (1995) Cladistic relationships of sphaerodactyl lizards. American Museum Novitates, 3139, 1–23.

    Poinar, Jr., G.O., Buckley, R. & Brown, A.E. 2006. The Secrets of Burmese amber. Mid American Paleontological Society Digest, 29, 20–29.

    Poinar, Jr., G., Lambert, J.B. & Wu, Y. (2007) Araucarian source of fossiliferous Burmese amber: spectroscopic and anatomical evidence. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas, 1, 449–455.

    Ritzkowski, S. (1997) K-Ar-Altersbestimmung der Bernsteinführenden Sedimente des Samlandes (Paläogen, Bezirk Kaliningrad). Metalla (Sonderheft), 66, 19–23.

    Smith, M.A. (1935 ) Fauna of British India I, Reptiles. Taylor and Francis, London.

    Weitschat, W. and Wichard, W. (2002) Atlas of Plants and Animals in Baltic Amber. Verlag Dr Friedrich Pfeil, München.