taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
8C5D42D0BCD65699BBBC45F8CD11C476.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797356	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure1	Figure 1. Molecular phylogenetic hypothesis. Recovered relationship between species of the leaf-litter lizards in the genus Pholidobolus, including P. vertebralis near its type locality in Ecuador. The three recovered clades from the Colombian Western Andes are outlined in blue (clade A), orange (clade B) and yellow (clade D). A fourth clade of the Colombian Central Andes is outlined in green (clade C). Green dots indicate nodal support of at least 95 %. See Methods for further details on the phylogenetic analysis and Suppl. material 2 for the detailed tree with individuals as terminal nodes.	Figure 1. Molecular phylogenetic hypothesis. Recovered relationship between species of the leaf-litter lizards in the genus Pholidobolus, including P. vertebralis near its type locality in Ecuador. The three recovered clades from the Colombian Western Andes are outlined in blue (clade A), orange (clade B) and yellow (clade D). A fourth clade of the Colombian Central Andes is outlined in green (clade C). Green dots indicate nodal support of at least 95 %. See Methods for further details on the phylogenetic analysis and Suppl. material 2 for the detailed tree with individuals as terminal nodes.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
8C5D42D0BCD65699BBBC45F8CD11C476.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797358	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure3	Figure 3. Key morphological features of the three new species on the holotypes. External morphological traits allowing unambiguous diagnosis of the three north-western Colombian clades of Pholidobolus lizards recovered in our phylogenetic analysis. Pholidobolus argosi sp. nov. lacks one supraocular (numbered) and the prefrontal (filled in red) scales, both of which are present in the other two species. Males of P. odinsae sp. nov. exhibit predominantly black and dark grey ventral colouration, which is red with black markings in males of the two other species, as further shown by the image segmentation analyses: the stacked areas denote the proportion of pixels with each summarised hue. Lastly, P. celsiae sp. nov. reaches larger adult body size than the other two species, as evidenced by blue (clade A in Fig. 1), orange (B), and yellow (D) bars, which denote range of variation, and the black points, that represent the actual body size of the shown holotypes.	Figure 3. Key morphological features of the three new species on the holotypes. External morphological traits allowing unambiguous diagnosis of the three north-western Colombian clades of Pholidobolus lizards recovered in our phylogenetic analysis. Pholidobolus argosi sp. nov. lacks one supraocular (numbered) and the prefrontal (filled in red) scales, both of which are present in the other two species. Males of P. odinsae sp. nov. exhibit predominantly black and dark grey ventral colouration, which is red with black markings in males of the two other species, as further shown by the image segmentation analyses: the stacked areas denote the proportion of pixels with each summarised hue. Lastly, P. celsiae sp. nov. reaches larger adult body size than the other two species, as evidenced by blue (clade A in Fig. 1), orange (B), and yellow (D) bars, which denote range of variation, and the black points, that represent the actual body size of the shown holotypes.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
8C5D42D0BCD65699BBBC45F8CD11C476.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797361	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure6	Figure 6. Variation in lizard ventral colouration. Among-species, among-sexes, and among-individuals variation in ventral colouration of three lizard species in the genus Pholidobolus. Pictures were taken immediately after euthanisation to reflect colour in life. To depict eventual covariation with body size, individuals are sorted from the smallest (extremes) to the largest (middle) one.	Figure 6. Variation in lizard ventral colouration. Among-species, among-sexes, and among-individuals variation in ventral colouration of three lizard species in the genus Pholidobolus. Pictures were taken immediately after euthanisation to reflect colour in life. To depict eventual covariation with body size, individuals are sorted from the smallest (extremes) to the largest (middle) one.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
8C5D42D0BCD65699BBBC45F8CD11C476.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797362	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure7	Figure 7. Geographic and altitudinal distribution. Geographic (A) and altitudinal (B) distribution of five species of Pholidobolus lizards across the north of the Western and Central Colombian Andes. The cladogram summarises the recovered phylogenetic relationship among them (Fig. 1). Each dot represents an individual deposited in the MHUA-R collection at the Universidad de Antioquia.	Figure 7. Geographic and altitudinal distribution. Geographic (A) and altitudinal (B) distribution of five species of Pholidobolus lizards across the north of the Western and Central Colombian Andes. The cladogram summarises the recovered phylogenetic relationship among them (Fig. 1). Each dot represents an individual deposited in the MHUA-R collection at the Universidad de Antioquia.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
AB37609BD6935ED0838E2E7907FEA8D8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797362	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure7	Figure 7. Geographic and altitudinal distribution. Geographic (A) and altitudinal (B) distribution of five species of Pholidobolus lizards across the north of the Western and Central Colombian Andes. The cladogram summarises the recovered phylogenetic relationship among them (Fig. 1). Each dot represents an individual deposited in the MHUA-R collection at the Universidad de Antioquia.	Figure 7. Geographic and altitudinal distribution. Geographic (A) and altitudinal (B) distribution of five species of Pholidobolus lizards across the north of the Western and Central Colombian Andes. The cladogram summarises the recovered phylogenetic relationship among them (Fig. 1). Each dot represents an individual deposited in the MHUA-R collection at the Universidad de Antioquia.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
AB37609BD6935ED0838E2E7907FEA8D8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797356	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure1	Figure 1. Molecular phylogenetic hypothesis. Recovered relationship between species of the leaf-litter lizards in the genus Pholidobolus, including P. vertebralis near its type locality in Ecuador. The three recovered clades from the Colombian Western Andes are outlined in blue (clade A), orange (clade B) and yellow (clade D). A fourth clade of the Colombian Central Andes is outlined in green (clade C). Green dots indicate nodal support of at least 95 %. See Methods for further details on the phylogenetic analysis and Suppl. material 2 for the detailed tree with individuals as terminal nodes.	Figure 1. Molecular phylogenetic hypothesis. Recovered relationship between species of the leaf-litter lizards in the genus Pholidobolus, including P. vertebralis near its type locality in Ecuador. The three recovered clades from the Colombian Western Andes are outlined in blue (clade A), orange (clade B) and yellow (clade D). A fourth clade of the Colombian Central Andes is outlined in green (clade C). Green dots indicate nodal support of at least 95 %. See Methods for further details on the phylogenetic analysis and Suppl. material 2 for the detailed tree with individuals as terminal nodes.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
AB37609BD6935ED0838E2E7907FEA8D8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797358	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure3	Figure 3. Key morphological features of the three new species on the holotypes. External morphological traits allowing unambiguous diagnosis of the three north-western Colombian clades of Pholidobolus lizards recovered in our phylogenetic analysis. Pholidobolus argosi sp. nov. lacks one supraocular (numbered) and the prefrontal (filled in red) scales, both of which are present in the other two species. Males of P. odinsae sp. nov. exhibit predominantly black and dark grey ventral colouration, which is red with black markings in males of the two other species, as further shown by the image segmentation analyses: the stacked areas denote the proportion of pixels with each summarised hue. Lastly, P. celsiae sp. nov. reaches larger adult body size than the other two species, as evidenced by blue (clade A in Fig. 1), orange (B), and yellow (D) bars, which denote range of variation, and the black points, that represent the actual body size of the shown holotypes.	Figure 3. Key morphological features of the three new species on the holotypes. External morphological traits allowing unambiguous diagnosis of the three north-western Colombian clades of Pholidobolus lizards recovered in our phylogenetic analysis. Pholidobolus argosi sp. nov. lacks one supraocular (numbered) and the prefrontal (filled in red) scales, both of which are present in the other two species. Males of P. odinsae sp. nov. exhibit predominantly black and dark grey ventral colouration, which is red with black markings in males of the two other species, as further shown by the image segmentation analyses: the stacked areas denote the proportion of pixels with each summarised hue. Lastly, P. celsiae sp. nov. reaches larger adult body size than the other two species, as evidenced by blue (clade A in Fig. 1), orange (B), and yellow (D) bars, which denote range of variation, and the black points, that represent the actual body size of the shown holotypes.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
AB37609BD6935ED0838E2E7907FEA8D8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797361	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure6	Figure 6. Variation in lizard ventral colouration. Among-species, among-sexes, and among-individuals variation in ventral colouration of three lizard species in the genus Pholidobolus. Pictures were taken immediately after euthanisation to reflect colour in life. To depict eventual covariation with body size, individuals are sorted from the smallest (extremes) to the largest (middle) one.	Figure 6. Variation in lizard ventral colouration. Among-species, among-sexes, and among-individuals variation in ventral colouration of three lizard species in the genus Pholidobolus. Pictures were taken immediately after euthanisation to reflect colour in life. To depict eventual covariation with body size, individuals are sorted from the smallest (extremes) to the largest (middle) one.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
4E59935579EC5471A1FA8D6843068DD4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797356	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure1	Figure 1. Molecular phylogenetic hypothesis. Recovered relationship between species of the leaf-litter lizards in the genus Pholidobolus, including P. vertebralis near its type locality in Ecuador. The three recovered clades from the Colombian Western Andes are outlined in blue (clade A), orange (clade B) and yellow (clade D). A fourth clade of the Colombian Central Andes is outlined in green (clade C). Green dots indicate nodal support of at least 95 %. See Methods for further details on the phylogenetic analysis and Suppl. material 2 for the detailed tree with individuals as terminal nodes.	Figure 1. Molecular phylogenetic hypothesis. Recovered relationship between species of the leaf-litter lizards in the genus Pholidobolus, including P. vertebralis near its type locality in Ecuador. The three recovered clades from the Colombian Western Andes are outlined in blue (clade A), orange (clade B) and yellow (clade D). A fourth clade of the Colombian Central Andes is outlined in green (clade C). Green dots indicate nodal support of at least 95 %. See Methods for further details on the phylogenetic analysis and Suppl. material 2 for the detailed tree with individuals as terminal nodes.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
4E59935579EC5471A1FA8D6843068DD4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797358	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure3	Figure 3. Key morphological features of the three new species on the holotypes. External morphological traits allowing unambiguous diagnosis of the three north-western Colombian clades of Pholidobolus lizards recovered in our phylogenetic analysis. Pholidobolus argosi sp. nov. lacks one supraocular (numbered) and the prefrontal (filled in red) scales, both of which are present in the other two species. Males of P. odinsae sp. nov. exhibit predominantly black and dark grey ventral colouration, which is red with black markings in males of the two other species, as further shown by the image segmentation analyses: the stacked areas denote the proportion of pixels with each summarised hue. Lastly, P. celsiae sp. nov. reaches larger adult body size than the other two species, as evidenced by blue (clade A in Fig. 1), orange (B), and yellow (D) bars, which denote range of variation, and the black points, that represent the actual body size of the shown holotypes.	Figure 3. Key morphological features of the three new species on the holotypes. External morphological traits allowing unambiguous diagnosis of the three north-western Colombian clades of Pholidobolus lizards recovered in our phylogenetic analysis. Pholidobolus argosi sp. nov. lacks one supraocular (numbered) and the prefrontal (filled in red) scales, both of which are present in the other two species. Males of P. odinsae sp. nov. exhibit predominantly black and dark grey ventral colouration, which is red with black markings in males of the two other species, as further shown by the image segmentation analyses: the stacked areas denote the proportion of pixels with each summarised hue. Lastly, P. celsiae sp. nov. reaches larger adult body size than the other two species, as evidenced by blue (clade A in Fig. 1), orange (B), and yellow (D) bars, which denote range of variation, and the black points, that represent the actual body size of the shown holotypes.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
4E59935579EC5471A1FA8D6843068DD4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797362	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure7	Figure 7. Geographic and altitudinal distribution. Geographic (A) and altitudinal (B) distribution of five species of Pholidobolus lizards across the north of the Western and Central Colombian Andes. The cladogram summarises the recovered phylogenetic relationship among them (Fig. 1). Each dot represents an individual deposited in the MHUA-R collection at the Universidad de Antioquia.	Figure 7. Geographic and altitudinal distribution. Geographic (A) and altitudinal (B) distribution of five species of Pholidobolus lizards across the north of the Western and Central Colombian Andes. The cladogram summarises the recovered phylogenetic relationship among them (Fig. 1). Each dot represents an individual deposited in the MHUA-R collection at the Universidad de Antioquia.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
4E59935579EC5471A1FA8D6843068DD4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/797361	https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1141.94774.figure6	Figure 6. Variation in lizard ventral colouration. Among-species, among-sexes, and among-individuals variation in ventral colouration of three lizard species in the genus Pholidobolus. Pictures were taken immediately after euthanisation to reflect colour in life. To depict eventual covariation with body size, individuals are sorted from the smallest (extremes) to the largest (middle) one.	Figure 6. Variation in lizard ventral colouration. Among-species, among-sexes, and among-individuals variation in ventral colouration of three lizard species in the genus Pholidobolus. Pictures were taken immediately after euthanisation to reflect colour in life. To depict eventual covariation with body size, individuals are sorted from the smallest (extremes) to the largest (middle) one.	2023-01-19	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.		Zenodo	biologists	Amezquita, Adolfo;Mazariegos-H, Luis A.;Canaveral, Santiago;Orejuela, Catalina;Barragan-Contreras, Leidy Alejandra;Daza, Juan M.			
