Holcosus leptophrys

Holcosus leptophrys does not appear in widely recognized scientific literature or major taxonomic databases as a validated species name. Consequently, reliable encyclopedic information about this term is lacking.

Limited discussion

  • Taxonomic context: Holcosus is a genus of neotropical lizards in the family Teiidae, commonly referred to as whiptail lizards. Species within this genus are distributed throughout Central America, the Caribbean, and northern South America.

  • Etymology: The specific epithet leptophrys is derived from Greek roots: “lepto‑” (λεπτός) meaning “slender” or “thin,” and “‑ophrys” (ὀφρύς) meaning “eyebrow” or “brow.” The name could therefore be interpreted as “slender‑eyebrowed,” possibly referring to a morphological characteristic such as a narrow supraocular stripe or scale arrangement, though no confirmed description exists.

  • Possible status: The name may represent an unpublished, provisional, or synonymized designation that has not been formally accepted in current herpetological taxonomy. Without corroborating sources, its validity cannot be confirmed.

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