Dalophia ellenbergeri (Angel, 1920)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13270044 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A7789640-FFA6-C37E-4AC4-9174827CE661 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Dalophia ellenbergeri (Angel, 1920) |
status |
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Dalophia ellenbergeri (Angel, 1920) View in CoL
Ellenberger’s Worm Lizard ( Fig. 6 View Fig , Map 5)
Material (4 specimens): PEM R 23408, Lungwebungu River camp bridge crossing, -12.58346° 18.66598°, 1,304 m asl; PEM R 23492, Cuanavale River source lake, -13.09442° 18.89372°, 1,396 m asl; PEM R 24002, 5 km west of Cuemba, -12.14751° 18.11650°, 1,329 m asl; PEM R 27392, Quembo River bridge camp, -13.52745° 19.2806°, 1,241 m asl. Description: All specimens exhibit the diagnostic ‘herringbone’ scale arrangement on the dorsal side of the tail; 16–21 dorsal segments per body annulus; 12–14 ventral segments per body annulus; 309–319 body annuli; 29–43 caudal annuli; caudal autonomy site at the 8 th caudal annulus; 3–4 supralabials; 3 infralabials. Largest specimen: 336.0 + 76.0 mm ( PEM R 27392). Habitat and natural history notes: All specimens were excavated from sandy soils, except for one individual that was found on the surface after heavy rain and another which was found taking refuge under a tree log. Comments: Angola has one of the richest assemblages of amphisbaenians in Africa, represented by three genera and 11 species ( Marques et al. 2018). The taxonomy of Angolan amphisbaenians has a turbid history, and many of the species have not been evaluated in a phylogenetic framework. The only phylogenetic study on African amphisbaenians incorporated only one Angolan sample ( Measey and Tolley 2013). Dalophia ellenbergeri was first reported from Angola by Branch and McCartney (1992) under the name D. pistillum and later re-identified as D. ellenbergeri ( Broadley 1997) . This is only the second time this species has been recorded from Angola and it is now documented from four additional localities. Elsewhere it is only recorded from western Zambia ( Broadley 1971; Pietersen et al. 2021).
PEM |
Port Elizabeth Museum |
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
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