Calumma benovskyi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Calumma benovskyi Temporal range: | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Reptilia |
| Order: | Squamata |
| Suborder: | Iguania |
| Family: | Chamaeleonidae |
| Genus: | Calumma |
| Species: | †C. benovskyi |
| Binomial name | |
| †Calumma benovskyi Čerňanský et al., 2020 | |
Calumma benovskyi is an extinct species of chameleon of the Calumma genus. While species of this genus are only found on Madagascar today, C. benovskyi was discovered in the Miocene sediments of Kenya. This indicates that the genus and even chameleons as a whole did not originate on Madagascar, as often held previously, but on continental Africa. This matches with several prior studies that favor an African origin of the group both based on phylogenetic results and the ocean currents present between Africa and Madagascar during much of the Paleogene and Neogene. Additionally, since C. benovskyi was found to be a rather derived member of its genus, this would necessitate a much greater, as of yet unknown diversity of chameleons from the Oligocene and Miocene of Africa.
The fossil material of Calumma benovskyi was discovered by Alan Walker in the Miocene sediments of the Kenyan Hiwegi Formation of Rusinga Island. The type specimen (KNM-RU 18340), a complete skull with attached mandible and the first three neck vertebrae, was then preliminarily described by Rieppel, Walker and Odhiambo on the basis of a cast and photographs in 1992. Although already noting similarities to Calumma, the researchers assigned the material to an early species of the genus Rhampholeon.[1] Nearly 30 years later the skull was subjected to X-ray microcomputed tomography in order to reveal hidden detail and virtually prepare the material, which is still filled with matrix. During the course of this study, the authors reevaluated the taxonomic position of the material, instead finding it to be placed in Calumnm and establishing a new species.[2]
The species is named after Maurice Benyovszky, a military officer and traveler born in Vrbové, Slovakia. Benyovszky made several travels to Madagascar, which Čerňanský and colleagues liken to the fact that Calumma represents a genus "born" abroad that later traveled to the island.[2]
Description

C. benovskyi is differentiated from all other Calumma species by the shape of the frontal bone, which forms well-developed triangular processes towards the back of this element. It further differs through the combination of various other anatomical details of the skull, like the fact that the frontal contacts the nasal bone. A prefrontal fenestra is present and is connected with the external nares, forming a single skull opening. The prefrontal contacts the postorbitofrontal, preventing the frontal bone from contributing to the margins of the orbits. When the skull is viewed from above, the prefrontals incline towards the side and the parietal bone shows a characteristic hourglass shape. The protuberances located on the parietal are arranged in a pattern resembling the Greek letter Ψ (psi). These protuberances continue onto the frontal, where they are more evenly distributed. The jugal is lined with only a single line of protuberances. Between the sculpting of the surface, the back third of the parietal is additionally fully pierced by the pineal eye. The inward-facing edge of the orbits are concave rather than straight. The back of the postorbitofrontal is elevated above the eyes, putting the supratemporal fenestrae into a horizontal position and rendering them invisible in profile view. Continuing on towards the squamosal bone, this element is relatively horizontal rather than vertical. In general the skull reaches its greatest width in the area where the frontal and parietal bones meet, after which the skull narrows again giving it an oval shape. In profile view the skull is roughly triangular, with a tapering snout and a flat casque, the later of which confined to the region behind the large eyesockets.[2]
Some of these traits are variable among species within the genus Calumma. For instance, the jugal of both Calumma ambreense and Parson's chameleon feature two rows of protuberances, while the short-horned chameleon shares a single row with C. benovskyi. The connection between prefrontal fenestra and naris also varies between species and genera, present in the big-nosed chameleon, deceptive chameleon and the giant one-horned chameleon, but absent in the flat-casqued chameleon, short-horned chameleon and the genera Chamaeleo and Furcifer. The same applies to many of the other features observed in Calumma benovskyi, rendering the specific combination diagnostic to the species.[2]
