Uropeltis Cuvier, 1829
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/z2016n4a2 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BFFD82EF-50C9-42BF-8493-DF57591EA4FF |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A82A47-833E-FFA1-FC3D-FE43FE507AC3 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Uropeltis Cuvier, 1829 |
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Siluboura Gray, 1845: 142. Type species: Uropeltis ceylanica Cuvier, 1829 , by monotypy. The unjustified emendation Silybura Peters, 1861 later entered widespread usage (e.g., Beddome 1886; Boulenger 1893a).
Coloburus Duméril in Duméril & Duméril, 1851: 224. Type species: Uropeltis ceylanica Cuvier, 1829 , by monotypy.
TYPE SPECIES. — Uropeltis ceylanica Cuvier, 1829 , by subsequent designation of Fitzinger (1843).
INCLUDED SPECIES. — Uropeltis arcticeps , U. beddomii , U. bicatenata , U. broughami , U. ceylanica , U. dindigalensis , U. ellioti , U. grandis , U. liura , U. macrolepis , U. macrorhyncha , U. maculata , U. madurensis , U. myhendrae , U. nitida , U. ocellata , U. petersi , U. phipsonii , U. pulneyensis , U. rubrolineata , U. rubromaculata , U. shorttii , and U. woodmasoni .
DIAGNOSIS. — Uropeltis can be distinguished from all other amniotes by the characters given for the family, and from other uropeltids by united oculars, nasals in contact (except U. pulneyensis and some U. grandis ), no temporal, no mental groove, dorsal scales in 15-19 rows at midbody, Oberhäutchen dentitions that are> 1.7 mm and 51-80% of the total cell size in all species examined thusfar ( U. phipsonii , U. ellioti , and U. ceylanica ; Gower 2003), and shortened, compressed tail that is either 1) rounded with keeled dorsal scales terminating in a somewhat enlarged convex cap formed by the terminal scute (Type III), 2) shortened, heavily truncated tail ending in a distinct flattened disc covered in multicarinate scales, with a terminal scute bearing multiple distinct points (Type IV), or 3) shortened, heavily truncated tail ending in a convex disc covered in multicarinate scales with a terminal scute bearing multiple distinct points (Type V; Fig. 3 View FIG ).
DISTRIBUTION. — Peninsular India, mainly in the Western Ghats of eastern Kerala and southwestern Tamil Nadu, with some species extending North as far as Surat, Dangs ( Uropeltis macrolepis ) and into the Central Indian hills and the Eastern Ghats ( U. ellioti and U. shorttii ; see Smith 1943; Rajendran 1985; McDiarmid et al. 1999; Whitaker & Captain 2004; Ganesh et al. 2014; Wallach et al. 2014; Ganesh 2015).
DESCRIPTION
For the 15 specimens from 14 species dissected, none of the characteristics of visceral topology examined are uniquely diagnostic of the genus at the reduced significance level used (<0.001). However, several features are near or outside the range of variation seen in the other genera, and larger sample sizes from more taxa may reveal them to be diagnostic. These are smaller densely vascularized portion of the right lung (mean 6.2% SVL vs 7.4%), more posterior tip of the right lung (57% vs 53%), more posterior left lung orifice (33% vs 30%), and larger number of tracheal rings (mean of 222 vs 185).
REMARKS
Following the taxonomic actions taken above, this genus does not occur in Sri Lanka. Some Indian members of this group bearing putative Rhinophis - type snout or shield morphologies (but rarely in combination), such as Uropeltis grandis , U. macrorhyncha , and U. pulneyensis , may be re-assigned in future analyses (see below).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Uropeltis Cuvier, 1829
Pyron, Robert Alexander, Ganesh, Sumaithangi Rajagopalan, Sayyed, Amit, Sharma, Vivek, Wallach, Van & Somaweera, Ruchira 2016 |
Coloburus Duméril
DUMERIL A. M. C. & DUMERIL A. H. A. 1851: 224 |
Uropeltis
CUVIER G. 1829: 76 |