1. A new stiletto snake (Lamprophiidae, Atractaspidinae, Atractaspis) from Liberia and Guinea, West Africa
- Author
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Piero Carlino, Kristin Mahlow, Christoph Kucharzewski, Olivier S. G. Pauwels, Laurent Chirio, Gordon Sambolah, Julian Glos, and Mark-Oliver Rödel
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Reptilia ,Atractaspidinae ,Lialis ,Elapotinus ,Amniota ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Lamprophiidae ,Atractaspis ,West africa ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gnathostomata ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Branchiostoma capense ,Chordata ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biogeography ,Vertebrata ,Craniata ,Serpentes ,biology ,Ymeria ,Reptiliomorpha ,Biodiversity hotspot ,Cephalornis ,Caenophidia ,Upper Guinea forest ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,species delimitation ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,rainforest - Abstract
We describe a new stiletto snake,Atractaspis, from western Liberia and southeastern Guinea. The new species shares with morphologically similar western AfricanAtractaspisspecies,A.reticulataandA.corpulenta, the fusion of the 2ndinfralabial with the inframaxillary. FromA.corpulentathe new species differs by a more slender body (276–288 ventrals and 19 or 20 dorsal scale rows versus 178–208 ventrals with 23–29 dorsal scale rows), a divided anal plate and divided subcaudal scales (both non-divided inA.corpulenta). The new species differs from mostA.reticulataby having 19 or 20 dorsal scale rows at midbody (versus 21–23, rarely 19), and a lower ventral count (276–288 versus 304–370). The new species thus has a relatively longer tail: snout-vent-length / tail-length in the female holotype (15.7) and paratype (21.5) versus a mean of 23.6 in seven femaleA.reticulata. The newAtractaspislikely is endemic to the western part of the Upper Guinea forest zone and thus adds to the uniqueness of this diverse and threatened biogeographic region.
- Published
- 2019