Spilotes samarensis Peters, 1861 :685
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4512.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E752FB7B-F34C-4D12-B8A2-EA6C791DD6C7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5997365 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C80EBE29-FFD2-FFE3-FF75-FC630CECF9EE |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Spilotes samarensis Peters, 1861 :685 |
status |
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Spilotes samarensis Peters, 1861:685
Taxonomic status. Junior synonym of S. muelleri .
Synonyms. None.
Original name. Spilotes Samarensis Peters, 1861:685 . Wilhelm Peters (1815–1883; Fig. 3I View FIGURE 3 ) was an influential German zoologist who, for a time, worked as an assistant to Johannes Müller (for whom S. muelleri was named; see above) in the anatomical institute of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin. At the time he wrote this species description, Peters had succeeded Martin Hinrich Lichtenstein (1780–1857) as director of the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin. The species was named for the island on which it was collected. The species description was presented in German. The undated portrait of Peters ( Fig. 3I View FIGURE 3 ; public domain) is from the archives of the ZMB.
Holotype. ZMB 4294 View Materials ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ; Table 1), an adult male (according to the original description). The specimen consists of only the skin with the complete head, and it was originally described in this state. Some data (including sex and length measurements) must therefore have been obtained from the specimen by someone other than Peters before it was skinned.
Type locality. “Cubo-Cubo, Insel Samar” [Cobocóbo, northern Samar Island, The Philippines].
Collection. The specimen was collected by Fedor Jagor (1816–1900; Fig. 3J View FIGURE 3 ), a German ethnologist and collector, who for several decades supplied specimens from various parts of Southeast Asia to European museums. Jagor arrived in the town of Laoang on Samar Island by boat on 5 July 1859 and proceeded shortly thereafter (the exact timing is not discernable from Jagor’s own travelogue) into the island’s interior from Catarmán, a settlement on the northern coast of Samar at the mouth of the Catarmán River ( Jagor 1873, 1875). This journey then continued up the Catarmán River, along which the settlement of Cobocóbo was reached by rowing continuously for 24 h. Based on the circumstantial evidence provided in Jagor’s account, it is most likely that the specimen was collected during the first half of July 1859. Jagor’s portrait ( Fig. 3J View FIGURE 3 ; public domain) was drawn in 1886 by the German painter Christian Wilhelm Allers (1857–1915) and published by Olinda (1900).
Key characteristics of the holotype. 1680 (O) mm SVL + 390 (O) mm TL = 2070 (O) mm TTL. V ♂ = 232 (236), SC ♂ = 81 (78), SCR ♂ = 0.26 (0.25), D = O-17-O (17-17-15), SL E = 4+5 (4+5), SL = 9 (9R 8L; on the left side, there is an irregular fusion of two SLs), IL = O (10), IL G = O (4).
Key characteristics of the species. See the account of S. muelleri above.
SCR |
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California |
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.