Typhlops notorachius, Thomas, Richard & Hedges, Blair, 2007

Thomas, Richard & Hedges, Blair, 2007, Eleven new species of snakes of the genus Typhlops (Serpentes: Typhlopidae) from Hispaniola and Cuba, Zootaxa 1400, pp. 1-26 : 21

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.175414

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5677335

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/004FE949-FFA0-FFD8-FF3F-FF22FE5D275E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Typhlops notorachius
status

sp. nov.

Typhlops notorachius new species ( Figs. 8 View FIGURE 8 H, 9D–E)

Holotype: MNHNCu 4551 (field tag number 191322), a male from 9.4 km W Imias, Guantánamo Province, Cuba, 5 meters, collected on 1 July 1990 by S. Blair Hedges, Richard Thomas, and Daniel McCallister.

Paratypes: USNM 564799, a male, same collection data as holotype; USNM 564797–798, Playitas de Cajobabo, Guantánamo Province, Cuba, 0 meters, collected on 1 August 1989 by Richard Thomas and S. Blair Hedges.

Diagnosis: A relatively large species of the Typhlops biminiensis group differing from T. biminiensis in having a rostral with an acuminate posterior edge, not broadly rounded. Also, the rostral has parallel sides and is not indented at apex of the snout ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). Additionally, T. notorachius has a proportionately smaller rostral than the preceding species ( T. biminiensis , T. arator , T. perimychus , and T. anousius ) ( Figs. 8 View FIGURE 8 , 10 View FIGURE 10 A). The difference in body size between T. notorachius and T. perimychus is striking; not considering the associated specimen of the latter species (which may be a different species), all four specimens of T. notorachius (282– 301 mm TL) are larger than all 18 specimens of T. perimychus (130–280 mm TL). Because each species was collected at multiple localities and, in the case of T. perimychus , over four decades, we surmise that the body size difference is real and not the result of collecting bias. Also, T. notorachius differs from T. perimychus in having a greater anterior nasal width (ANTNAS/RW1): 0.42–0.53 versus 0.34–0.39 in T. perimychus . From T. anousius , T. notorachius also differs in its point of scale row reduction: 15–40% TL versus 2% TL in T. anousius .

Description: Snout smoothly rounded. Rostral broad and rounded in dorsal aspect, nearly as broad as long in most specimens (RW1/RL1 0.78–0.87), nearly straight­sided, parallel or widening somewhat posteriorly; not flared on apex; no labial flare. Anterior nasal width as a proportion of RW1 0.42–0.53. Preocular angle 108–120°, apex rounded; lower portion contacting labials 2 and 3 of upper labial series. OL 1/2 height, OS 0.23–0.34. Rostronasal pattern strongly divergent. Postocular 3–4 times higher than long. First parietal standard, spanning 2 scale rows or slightly less. Second parietal present and similar in width to the first or absent. TL to 301 mm. TL/TA 48–75. TL/MBD 45–57. Middorsal scales 475–529. Scale rows 24 reducing to 22 at 15–40% TL. Coloration bicolor with dorsal pigmentation (pale brown) fading ventrad anteriorly but ending abruptly by dropping out of pigmented scales posteriorly; 9 (mode) to 11 pigmented scale rows at midbody. Distribution: Known only from the south coast of eastern (Oriente) Cuba, over an extent of about 27 km between the two known localities, east of Guantánamo Bay. The westernmost of the localities, 9.4 km W Imias, is about 30 km east of the type locality for Typhlops anousius ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ).

Etymology: An adjective made from the Greek, notos, south, and rhachia, shore, meaning “of the southern shore.”

The next new species having affinities with T. biminiensis also occurs on the southern coast of eastern Cuba. It may be known as

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Typhlopidae

Genus

Typhlops

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF