Palleon 

GLAW, HAWLITSCHEK & RUTHENSTEINER, 2013



The genus Palleon GLAW, HAWLITSCHEK & RUTHENSTEINER, 2013 

consists currently of 2 and 3 subspeciesspecies:


Palleon lolontany (RAXWORTHY & NUSSBAUM, 1995)

Palleon nasus (BOULENGER, 1887)

     Palleon nasus nasus (BOULENGER, 1887)

     Palleon nasus pauliani (BRYGOO, BLANC & DOMERGUE 1972)


Interesting info on Palleon:

Palleon gen. nov.  A New Genus Name for An Ancient Malagasy Chameleon Clade

Frank Glaw, Oliver Hawlitschek and Bernhard Ruthensteiner. 2013. A New Genus Name for An Ancient Malagasy Chameleon Clade and A PDF-embedded 3D Model of Its Skeleton. SALAMANDRA. 49(4) 237–238.


Recent research has led to enormous progress in the understanding of chameleon phylogeny, and new genus names were introduced for most of the identified deep chameleon clades (Kinyongia, Nadzikambia, Rieppeleon), or available names were resurrected from synonymy (Archaius) or elevated from subgenus level (Trioceros). A remarkable exception is a deep lineage composed of the two morphologically distinct species Brookesia ­nasus and B. lolontany from Madagascar. Raxworthy et al. (2002) found this lineage to be the basal clade in the family Chamaeleonidae, but more recent studies regarded it (with limited support) as a sister group of all other Brookesia that split off in the Cretaceous or Palaeocene. Thus, the Brookesia ­nasus-lolontany clade split off much earlier than all other extant chameleon clades recognized today as distinct genera. In the present paper, we provide new data on B.­ lolontany (including an embedded 3D-PDF model of its skeleton) and a morphologi-cal diagnosis of the Bnasus-lolontany clade, and transfer the two species to a new genus. As already emphasized by Vences et al. (2013), this decision results in two clearly monophyletic genera with improved morphological diagnosability.

Palleon gen. n. Type species: Brookesia nasus Boulenger, 1887
Content: Palleon nasus nasus (Boulenger, 1887), Palleon nasus pauliani (Brygoo, Blanc & Domergue, 1972), Palleon lolontany (Raxworthy & Nussbaum, 1995).
Etymology. The new genus name Palleon is derived from the Greek word "Palae-" (meaning "old") and the Greek word "leon" (meaning "lion"; as used for other chameleon genera), referring to the very early separation of this clade. The resulting composite Palae-o-leon is shortened to Palleon for simplified pronunciation. The gender of the genus is masculine.

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