Imantodes lentiferus ( Cope, 1894 )

Nogueira, Cristiano C., Argôlo, Antonio J. S., Arzamendia, Vanesa, Azevedo, Josué A., Barbo, Fausto E., Bérnils, Renato S., Bolochio, Bruna E., Borges-Martins, Marcio, Brasil-Godinho, Marcela, Braz, Henrique, Buononato, Marcus A., Cisneros-Heredia, Diego F., Colli, Guarino R., Costa, Henrique C., Franco, Francisco L., Giraudo, Alejandro, Gonzalez, Rodrigo C., Guedes, Thaís, Hoogmoed, Marinus S., Marques, Otavio A. V., Montingelli, Giovanna G., Passos, Paulo, Prudente, Ana L. C., Rivas, Gilson A., Sanchez, Paola M., Serrano, Filipe C., Silva Jr., Nelson J., Strüssmann, Christine, Vieira-Alencar, João Paulo S., Zaher, Hussam, Sawaya, Ricardo J. & Martins, Marcio, 2019, Atlas of Brazilian Snakes: Verified Point-Locality Maps to Mitigate the Wallacean Shortfall in a Megadiverse Snake Fauna, South American Journal of Herpetology 14 (s 1), pp. 1-274 : 27

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.2994/SAJH-D-19-00120.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10063046

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E93867-8E54-D34E-4DB2-FF19FF6EFD8D

treatment provided by

Diego

scientific name

Imantodes lentiferus ( Cope, 1894 )
status

 

Imantodes lentiferus ( Cope, 1894) View in CoL

Type locality. Pebas , department of Loreto, Ecuador .

Distribution. Known from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela, in Amazonian forest ( Plt. 209A View Plate 209 ). In Brazil, widespread in Amazonia ( Plt. 209A View Plate 209 ), mostly at low elevations ( Plt. 209B View Plate 209 ). Observed in the field in primary and secondary forest ( Alonso et al., 2001; McDiarmid and Donnelly, 2005; Prudente et al., 2010; Ávila et al., 2011; Silva et al., 2011).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Colubridae

Genus

Imantodes

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