17 results on '"Felipe Franco Curcio"'
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2. Long known, brand new, and possibly threatened: a new species of watersnake of the genus Helicops Wagler, 1828 (Serpentes; Xenodontinae) from the Tocantins-Araguaia River Basin, Brazil
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Antonio Moraes-Da-Silva, Pedro M. Sales Nunes, Renata Cecília Amaro, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, and Felipe Franco Curcio
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Male ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Xenodontinae ,Drainage basin ,Colubridae ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Sister group ,Rivers ,Genus ,Threatened species ,Molecular phylogenetics ,Vicariance ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Endemism ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Brazil ,Phylogeny - Abstract
We describe a new species of watersnake of the genus Helicops from the Tocantins-Araguaia River Basin based on characters of coloration and hemipenial morphology, also corroborated by a molecular phylogenetic analysis including 18 terminals of 10 additional congeners. The new species superficially resembles the spotted-patterned He. leopardinus, but differs from it in exhibiting dorsal spots fused into irregular bands, and a unique hemipenial structure with two pairs of distinctly enlarged basal spines. In addition, despite the superficial resemblance of color pattern, our genetic evidence indicates that the new species does not belong to the He. leopardinus radiation, representing the sister group of a component including terminals of this species, He. modestus, and He. infrataeniatus. Finally, we discuss the apparent restriction of the new species to the Tocantins-Araguaia Basin with focus on vicariant processes that may have promoted its differentiation, as well as on the conservation challenges in an area severely affected by anthropic impacts associated with the rapid expansion of hydroelectric and agricultural sectors in the Brazilian Cerrado.
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- 2021
3. Chance, luck and a fortunate finding: a new species of watersnake of the genus Helicops Wagler, 1828 (Serpentes: Xenodontinae), from the Brazilian Pantanal wetlands
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Mauro Junior Teixeira, Christine Strüssmann, Felipe Franco Curcio, Renata Cecília Amaro, Pedro M. Sales Nunes, Vinícius Sudré, Renato Sousa Recoder, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, Antonio Moraes-Da-Silva, and Albedi Jr. Andrade
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0106 biological sciences ,Dorsum ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Xenodontinae ,010607 zoology ,Colubridae ,Zoology ,Color ,Wetland ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Wetlands ,Molecular phylogenetics ,Single specimen ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Snout ,Clade ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Brazil ,Phylogeny - Abstract
We describe a new watersnake of the genus Helicops based on a single specimen found in the northern limit of the Brazilian Pantanal. Immediately after collection, the unique features of color pattern and head proportions prevented us to attribute this specimen to any other congener. Further comparisons revealed that the combination of entire nasal scales, a distinctively acuminate snout, high dorsal and supralabial counts, as well as a dorsal pattern with chain-like spot rows and a venter with vivid and peculiar orange markings confirmed that the specimen represented a new species. Molecular data supported our morphological conclusion recovering the new species deeply nested within Helicops terminals, sister to a clade composed by H. carinicaudus and H. nentur. Our discovery represents a rare instance of a snake species restricted to the Brazilian Pantanal, but we refrain from considering it a Pantanal endemic until further records allow more considerations on distributional patterns.
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- 2019
4. Taxonomic Status ofErythrolamprus bizonaJan (1863) (Serpentes, Xenodontinae): Assembling a Puzzle with Many Missing Pieces
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Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, Stefano Scali, and Felipe Franco Curcio
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,Xenodontinae ,Population ,Geographic variation ,biology.organism_classification ,Genealogy ,Erythrolamprus ,Paleontology ,MORFOLOGIA ANIMAL ,Typification ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We reassessed the taxonomic status of the xenodontine snake Erythrolamprus bizona Jan (1863) based on a comprehensive review of literature records and comparative material. Our data demonstrate that the original diagnosis does not allow the unambiguous attribution of the name E. bizona to any population of the genus. After a thorough investigation in European institutions, we recovered two syntypes of the E. bizona type-series, confirming its composite nature. To circumvent the problem, we herein designate a lectotype for the species, providing a reformulated diagnosis and a detailed redescription. The lectotype represents one of the rare remaining specimens used in Giorgio Jan’s original descriptions during the second half of 19th century, and is housed in the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano, Milan, Italy. For more than seven decades, herpetologists have assumed that such material had been lost forever due to bombings of World War II. Nonetheless, our finding corroborates recent stud...
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- 2015
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5. Osteology and Cartilaginous Elements ofTrilepida salgueiroi(Amaral, 1954) (Scolecophidia: Leptotyphlopidae)
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Roberta R. Pinto, Luciana O. Ramos, Felipe Franco Curcio, and Angele Martins
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Scolecophidia ,Histology ,biology ,Osteology ,Subcaudal scales ,Postcrania ,Anatomy ,Leptotyphlopidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Sexual dimorphism ,Skull ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Biotechnology ,Ventral scales - Abstract
Morphological and anatomical studies on the Leptotyphlopidae have increased in the past 10 years, providing important data on the systematics of this group, mainly focused on the skull and lower jaw morphology. However, most studies are based on a single specimen, rarely combining more than one single method of assessing morphological information. Therefore, several data on postcranial morphology, sexual dimorphism, and ontogenetic and intraspecific variation of leptotyphlopids remain poorly understood. Herein, we provide a detailed description of the cranial and postcranial skeleton of Trilepida salgueiroi based on more than 20 specimens (including males, females and juveniles), as well as a description of osteology and cartilaginous elements through the use of combined methodologies such as X-ray scanning, high resolution CT-scanning, and clearing and staining of articulated and disarticulated specimens. We also provide data on the presence/absence of dimorphic and intraspecific variation of the observed characters. The presence of a statolithic mass in the cavum vestibuli differs from the pattern found in other scolecophidians. A correlation of dorsal vertebrae with ventral and subcaudal scales was found (1:1), as well as total number of vertebrae with middorsal scales (1:1), thoracolumbar vertebrae and ventral scales (1:1), and a higher number of caudal vertebra with subcaudal scales (1.23:1). Intraspecific variation was found in several elements of the skull, lower jaw, pelvic girdle and vertebral number, but no evidence of sexual dimorphism was found in any of the species characters analysed. The homologies of several elements are discussed, although still remaining poorly understood and unknown. Anat Rec, 298:1722–1747, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2015
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6. Who is the red-bearded snake, anyway? Clarifying the taxonomic status of Chironius pyrrhopogon (Wied, 1824) (Serpentes: Colubridae)
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Felipe Franco Curcio, Pedro M. Sales Nunes, Katia Cristina Machado Pellegrino, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, and Vinícius Sudré
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Chironius exoletus ,biology ,Colubridae ,BIOGEOGRAFIA ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Atlantic forest ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Chironius ,Taxonomy - Abstract
We provide morphological data supporting the allocation of Chironius pyrrhopogon (Wied, 1824) in the synonymy of C. exoletus , proposed earlier in the literature without proper justification. Besides the historical (literature) data, we also examined 155 Chironius specimens previously identified as C. exoletus , C. pyrrhopogon and C . quadricarinatus that could possibly fit the diagnosis and distribution of Wied’s specimens, and performed statistical tests to assess potentially informative variations in the sample. In addition, we concluded that the color features associated with C. pyrrhopogon are by no means diagnostic of a unique entity. Nonetheless, although apparently present at random in some Chironius species in the Atlantic Forest, we suggest that the reddish-brown spots are possibly linked to other phenomena involving co-evolutionary interactions with anuran potential preys.
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- 2017
7. Are Hemipenial Spines Related to Limb Reduction? A Spiny Discussion Focused on Gymnophthalmid Lizards (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae)
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Felipe Franco Curcio, Pedro M. Sales Nunes, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, and Juliana G. Roscito
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Gymnophthalmidae ,Functional role ,Histology ,Squamata ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Lizard ,Limb reduction ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Evolutionary biology ,biology.animal ,Hemipenis ,Mating ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Calcified spines in the hemipenial surface occur convergently in several gymnophthalmid lizard species and in advanced snakes. Based on the pronounced degrees of limb reduction in these distantly related lineages, such hemipenial structures were suggested to play a functional role in couple-anchoring during copulation, partly assuming the function of the limbs during mating. Herein, we assessed the hemipenial morphology of virtually all the valid genera of the family Gymnophthalmidae to test for a phylogenetic correlation between limb reduction and the presence of calcified hemipenial spines. The occurrence of calcified structures was mapped on the two most comprehensive phylogenies of the family. We concluded that spiny hemipenes are by no means necessarily associated with reduction of limbs. Conversely, the presence of well-developed hemipenial spines in specific limb-reduced taxa does not allow one to disregard the possibility that in some instances such structures might indeed be functionally associated with couple-anchoring, improving the success of mating.
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- 2014
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8. Cryptic species inIphisa elegansGray, 1851 (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae) revealed by hemipenial morphology and molecular data
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Philippe J. R. Kok, Felipe Franco Curcio, Antoine Fouquet, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, and Pedro M. Sales Nunes
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Gymnophthalmidae ,Sympatry ,Species complex ,Squamata ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Sympatric speciation ,Biological dispersal ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Reproductive isolation ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Iphisa elegans Gray, 1851 is a ground-dwelling lizard widespread over Amazonia that displays a broadly conserved external morphology over its range. This wide geographical distribution and conservation of body form contrasts with the expected poor dispersal ability of the species, the tumultuous past of Amazonia, and the previously documented prevalence of cryptic species in widespread terrestrial organisms in this region. Here we investigate this homogeneity by examining hemipenial morphology and conducting phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial (CYTB) and nuclear (C-MOS) DNA sequence data from 49 individuals sampled across Amazonia. We detected remarkable variation in hemipenial morphology within this species, with multiple cases of sympatric occurrence of distinct hemipenial morphotypes. Phylogenetic analyses revealed highly divergent lineages corroborating the patterns suggested by the hemipenial morphotypes, including co-occurrence of different lineages. The degrees of genetic and morphological distinctness, as well as instances of sympatry among mtDNA lineages/morphotypes without nuDNA allele sharing, suggest that I. elegans is a complex of cryptic species. An extensive and integrative taxonomic revision of the I. elegans complex throughout its wide geographical range is needed. © 2012 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2012, 166, 361–376.
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- 2012
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9. On the Generic Identity of Siagonodon brasiliensis, with the Description of a New Leptotyphlopid from Central Brazil (Serpentes: Leptotyphlopidae)
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Roberta R. Pinto and Felipe Franco Curcio
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Scale (anatomy) ,biology ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,Aquatic Science ,Leptotyphlopidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Geographic distribution ,Siagonodon ,Genus ,Identity (object-oriented programming) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Snout ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The geographic variation and hemipenial morphology of Siagonodon brasiliensis are described based on a comprehensive sample, allowing the reappraisal of its generic identity, and the proposal of a new nomenclatural combination. We suggest that the presence of two supralabials, as mentioned in the original description of S. brasiliensis, is not a common feature for this species, occurring at low frequencies throughout its geographic distribution. Based on a diagnosis presented in a recently published paper, as well as on additional external traits and on hemipenial characters, we recognize Siagonodon brasiliensis as a species of the genus Tricheilostoma. In addition, a new species of worm snake of the genus Siagonodon is described from the savannas of the state of Tocantins, Brazil. The new species differs from other congeners by having a slightly acuminate snout in lateral and ventral views, subcircular rostral in dorsal view, and 12 scale rows around middle of tail. The diagnosis of the genus Siagonodon ...
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- 2011
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10. A New Genus of Microteiid Lizard from the Caparaó Mountains, Southeastern Brazil, with a Discussion of Relationships among Gymnophthalminae (Squamata)
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José Cassimiro, Dante Pavan, Felipe Franco Curcio, Vanessa Kruth Verdade, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, Katia Cristina Machado Pellegrino, Amer Museum Nat Hist, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), and Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP)
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Archeology ,History ,Reptilia ,Squamata ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Lizard ,Ecology ,Museology ,Biodiversity ,Dorsal scales ,biology.organism_classification ,Maximum parsimony ,Genus ,biology.animal ,Colobodactylus ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Clade ,Gymnophthalmidae ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) IBAMA A new genus and species of microteiid lizard is described based on a series of specimens obtained at Parque Nacional do Caparao (20 degrees 28'S, 41 degrees 49'W), southeastern Brazil, along the division line between the States of Minas Gerais and Espirito Santo. The new lizard occurs in isolated high-altitude, open, rocky habitats above the altitudinal lit-nits of the Atlantic forest. It is characterized by the presence of prefrontals, frontoparietals, parietals, interparietal, and occipital scales; ear opening and eyelid distinct; three pairs of genials; absence of collar; lanceolate and mucronate dorsal scales; six regular transverse and longitudinal series of smooth ventrals that are longer than wide, with the lateral ones narrower. Maximum parsimony (MP) and partitioned Bayesian (PBA) phylogenetic analyses based on morphological and molecular characters with all known genera of Gymnophthalminae (except for Scriptosaura) Plus Rhachisaurus recovered this new lizard in a clade having Colobodactylus and Heterodactylus as its closest relatives. Both analyses recovered the monophyly of Gymnophthalminae and Gymnophthalmini. The monophyly of the Heterodactylini received moderate support in MP analyses but was not recovered in PBA. To eliminate classification controversy between these results, the present concept of Heterodactylini is restricted to accommodate the new genus, Colobodactylus and Heterodactylus, and a new tribe Iphisiini is proposed to allocate Alexandresaurus, Iphisa, Colobosaura, Acratosaura, and Stenolepis. Current phylogenetic knowledge of Gymnophthalminae suggests that fossoriality and increase of body elongation arose as adaptive responses to avoid extreme surface temperatures, either cold or hot, depending on circumstances. Amer Museum Nat Hist, Div Vertebrate Zool Herpetol, New York, NY 10024 USA Univ Sao Paulo, Inst Biociencias, Dept Zool, BR-05422970 Sao Paulo, Brazil Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Dept Ciencias Biol, Diadema, SP, Brazil Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Dept Ciencias Biol, Diadema, SP, Brazil IBAMA: 094/2004 IBAMA: 185/2005 IBAMA: 238/2006 Web of Science
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- 2009
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11. Two New Species of Lizards of The Genus Bachia (Squamata, Gymnophthalmidae) from Central Brazil
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Felipe Franco Curcio, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, and Dante Pavan
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Gymnophthalmidae ,Squamata ,biology ,Ecology ,Bachia bresslaui ,Vegetation ,biology.organism_classification ,Bachia ,body regions ,Genus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Snout ,Endemism ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Two new species of Bachia of the bresslaui group are described from the central Brazilian Cerrados, state of Tocantins. The two species are most similar to Bachia bresslaui and Bachia cacerensis from which they differ in limb morphology and head scalation. In both, the snout is more prominent than that of previously known species, suggesting more pronounced adaptations to fossoriality. One of the new species has stiliform forelimbs and four clawed short toes in the hind limb, an opposite pattern to the condition observed in the genus where limb reduction is more pronounced in hind limbs. The two new species were obtained in relictual sandy soil areas covered by semidecidual or open dry forest vegetation. Considering the relictual condition of these sandy areas, the possible endemism to those areas, and the high level of disturbance of the Cerrados, we strongly suggest that these areas should be the target of special conservation efforts.
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- 2007
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12. Taxonomy of the South American dwarf boas of the genus Tropidophis Bibron, 1840, with the description of two new species from the Atlantic Forest (Serpentes: Tropidophiidae)
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Antônio Jorge Suzart Argôlo, Felipe Franco Curcio, Gabriel O. Skuk, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, and Pedro M. Sales Nunes
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biology ,Ecology ,Biome ,Zoology ,SERPENTES ,biology.organism_classification ,Taxon ,Hemipenis ,Tropidophis ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Mainland ,Type locality ,Tropidophiidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A taxonomic study on the South American dwarf boas of the genus Tropidophis revealed the existence of two new species in the Atlantic Forest biome. As a result, we recognize five mainland species, three in the Atlantic Forest and two in northwestern South America. Based on general distribution and morphological orientation, the type locality of T. paucisquamis is restricted to Estacao Biologica de Boraceia (EBB), municipality of Salesopolis, state of Sao Paulo, Brazil; furthermore, a lectotype for T. taczanowskyi is designated. We provide data on the hemipenial morphology of two South American Tropidophis, showing that the quadrifurcate condition described for West Indian taxa also occurs in mainland congeners. The distributions of the three Atlantic Forest species are congruent with patterns of diversification of other vertebrate taxa associated with cold climates prevalent at high elevations. Refugial isolation and riverine barriers may account for such speciation events.
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- 2012
13. Effects of Surface Roughness on the Locomotion of a Long-Tailed Lizard, Colobodactylus taunayi Amaral, 1933 (Gymnophthalmidae: Heterodactylini)
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Pérsio de Souza Santos Filho, André Eterovic, Elizabeth Höfling, Felipe Franco Curcio, and Sabine Renous
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Gymnophthalmidae ,Article Subject ,biology ,Lizard ,Limb reduction ,STRIDE ,LOCOMOÇÃO ANIMAL ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Trunk ,body regions ,Ectotherm ,biology.animal ,Colobodactylus taunayi ,lcsh:Zoology ,Surface roughness ,Animal Science and Zoology ,lcsh:QL1-991 - Abstract
We analyzed the locomotor behavior of a long-tailed, forest floor, and leaf litter lizard,Colobodactylus taunayi, a species that retains the generalized GymnophthalmidaeBauplanwhilst presenting the discrete toe reduction associated with theBachia-like pattern of limb reduction. We videotaped individuals moving on four substrates with increasing degrees of roughness: plastic, wooden board, glued sand, and glued gravel. Significantly higher speeds occurred on the last two substrates. As with most other limbed animals, increased speed was significantly correlated with simultaneous increases in both stride length and stride frequency. Independently of the kind of substrate,C. taunayiused rather slow lateral sequence walking trots. In contrast to other ectothermic tetrapods, and especially other Gymnophthalmidae, this species lacked perceptible lateral flexion of either the trunk or the tail to effectuate these slow gaits.
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- 2012
14. On the status of the snake genera Erythrolamprus Boie, Liophis Wagler and Lygophis Fitzinger (Serpentes, Xenodontinae)
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Vítor de Q. Piacentini, Daniel S. Fernandes, and Felipe Franco Curcio
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Liophis ,Xenodontinae ,Zoology ,Lystrophis ,Biodiversity ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Tribe (biology) ,Erythrolamprus ,Sensu ,Genus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Coral snake ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The genus Erythrolamprus Boie (1826) comprises six species of Central and South American false coral snakes (Peters & Orejas-Miranda 1970; Zaher 1999; Curcio et al. 2009). It is traditionally allocated in the tribe Xenodontini (subfamily Xenodontinae), along with the genera Liophis, Lystrophis, Umbrivaga, Waglerophis and Xenodon (sensu Dixon 1980; Cadle 1984; Myers 1986; Ferrarezzi 1994; Zaher 1999). Although Xenodontini is supported by morphological and molecular evidence, phylogenetic relationships and classification within the tribe have been the subject of recent debate. Molecular phylogenetic studies have recovered clades with Erythrolamprus nested within some representatives of the genus Liophis (Vidal et al. 2000; Zaher et al. 2009), partly corroborating previous hypotheses based on morphology (e.g. Dixon 1980).
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- 2009
15. Two new endangered species of Anomaloglossus (Anura: Aromobatidae) from Roraima State, northern Brazil
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Felipe Franco Curcio, Sergio Marques Souza, Celso Morato de Carvalho, Pedro M. Sales Nunes, Taran Grant, Philippe J. R. Kok, Antoine Fouquet, and Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues
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Critically endangered ,Anomaloglossus ,Habitat ,biology ,Amazon rainforest ,Ecology ,Aromobatidae ,Anthropogenic pressure ,Endangered species ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We describe two new species of Anomaloglossus from Roraima State, Brazil, that are likely endemic to single mountains currently isolated among lowland forest and savanna ecosystems. The first species, Anomaloglossus tepequem sp. nov. was collected in 1986 and 1992 along a single stream at >500 m elevation on a tepui-like mountain named Tepequem, but was not detected during recent investigations. It is mainly diagnosed from other Anomaloglossus species by its well developed foot webbing, immaculate cream abdomen colouration and small body size (males: 18.2–20.1 mm, females: 21.7–24.5). The second species, Anomaloglossus apiau sp. nov. was found along several streams between 500 and 1400 m elevation on Serra do Apiau, and is mainly diagnosed from congeners by its weakly webbed feet, males with swollen third finger and ventrolateral stripe formed by white dots, and its advertisement call; a long trill (up to almost 40 s) consisting of pairs of very short pulses. The discovery of these two apparently microendemic species suggests that additional Anomaloglossus species remain to be described in the Guiana Shield. Both species should be considered critically endangered given their seemingly reduced range size, association with highland habitat, and the anthropogenic pressure they currently face.
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- 2015
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16. Notes on distribution, variation and characterization of Erythrolamprus pseudocorallus Roze, 1959 (Serpentes: Colubridae) with the first records from Colombia
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Felipe Franco Curcio, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, Santiago J. Sánchez-Pacheco, and Jonh Jairo Mueses-Cisneros
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business.industry ,Colubridae ,Distribution (economics) ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Erythrolamprus ,Coral snake ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The Maracaibo false coral snake Erythrolamprus pseudocorallus, previously known only from Venezuela, is recorded from five departments in Colombia. These new data include the westernmost and the southernmost records presently known for the species. Two specimens previously identified as E. aesculapii, from the localities of El Valle, Distrito Federal, Venezuela, and Yarumal, Antioquia, Colombia, are now attributed to E. pseudocorallus, the first one representing the northeasternmost record of the species. Morphological characterization of E. pseudocorallus is expanded based on the new specimens.
17. Rediscovery of the blind-snake Leptotyphlops brasiliensis Laurent, 1949 (Serpentes, Leptotyphlopidae) in the wild
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Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues, Felipe Franco Curcio, and Hussam Zaher
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biology ,Leptotyphlops brasiliensis ,Zoology ,Cerrado ,Leptotyphlopidae ,Northeastern Brazil ,biology.organism_classification ,serpentes ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,rediscovery in the wild ,Animal Science and Zoology ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 - Abstract
1 Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Caixa Postal 42694, CEP 04299-970, Sao Paulo, Brazil. E-mails: ffcurcio@yahoo.com; hzaher@ib.usp.br. 2 Universidade de Sao Paulo, Instituto de Biociencias, Departamento de Zoologia, Caixa Postal 11461, CEP 05422970, Sao Paulo, Brazil. E-mail: mturodri@usp.br. Phyllomedusa 1(2):101-104, 2002 © 2002 Melopsittacus Publicacoes Cientificas ISSN 1519-1397
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