A multivariate morphometric analysis and systematic review of Pseudonaja (Serpentes, Elapidae, Hydrophiinae)
Author
Skinner, Adam
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2009
2009-01-31
155
1
171
197
https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00436.x
journal article
10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00436.x
0024-4082
5445858
PSEUDONAJA ASPIDORHYNCHA
(MCCOY, 1879)
Diemenia aspidorhyncha
McCoy, 1879: 13
.
Holotype
, NMV D12352; type locality, restricted to junction of
Murray River
and
Darling River
,
Victoria
, by
Coventry (1970)
.
Diemenia carinata
Longman, 1915: 31
.
Holotype
, QM
J1508
; type locality,
Cane Grass Station
, via
Charleville
,
Queensland
.
Demansia acutirostris
Mitchell, 1951: 547
.
Holotype
, SAMA
R3133
; type locality,
Lake Eyre
,
South Australia
.
Pseudonaja gowi
Wells, 2002: 6
.
Holotype
, designated as ‘the largest specimen of this species from the vicinity of Lyndhurst, SA in the South Australian Museum collection’ (
Wells, 2002: 6
); type locality, Lyndhurst,
South Australia
.
Figure 10.
Geographical distribution of
Pseudonaja affinis
specimens examined in this study (closed circles) and/or included in Skinner
et al.
’s (2005) phylogenetic analysis (open circles represent specimens not included in the morphometric analyses). Codes for geographical groups correspond with those in Table 2.
Diagnosis:
Pseudonaja aspidorhyncha
may be differentiated from the remaining species of
Pseudonaja
redescribed here except
P. nuchalis
in possessing a strap-like rostral that imparts a chisel shape to the snout from a dorsal perspective (see
Fig. 1
). A diploid chromosome number of 34 serves to distinguish
P. aspidorhyncha
from the remaining species of
Pseudonaja
except
P. affinis
and possibly
P. mengdeni
(see
Skinner
et al.
, 2005
, and below). The relative length of the prefrontal suture (i.e. the length of the prefrontal suture divided by head length) is consistently lower than for
P. textilis
specimens (
0.049
–0.092
vs.
0.096
–0.136
; see
Table 9
).
Pseudonaja aspidorhyncha
is separable from
P. mengdeni
and
P. nuchalis
in displaying (when preserved) a whitish to pale grey (as opposed to predominantly dark bluish grey) buccal epithelium (in live specimens, the buccal epithelium is never black as in
P. mengdeni
and
P. nuchalis
), and usually exhibits a greater number of ventrals than
P. inframacula
and
P. nuchalis
.
Description:
Ventrals 207–226; subcaudals 47–63; rostral strap like, snout appearing chisel shaped from dorsal perspective; nasal undivided, contacting preocular; two postoculars; parietal contacting (64 of 72 cases) or separated from (eight cases) lower postocular; six (70 of 72 cases) or five (two cases) supralabials; seven (71 of 72 cases) or eight (one case) infralabials; temporals 1 + 2 + 3 (61 of 71 cases), 1 + 2 + 4 (eight cases), 1 + 3 + 3 (one case) or 2 + 2 + 4 (one case); 5–8 nuchals contacting parietals; dorsals in 21–27 rows at first ventral, 17–20 rows one head length posterior to occiput, 17 rows midbody, 13–15 rows one head length anterior to vent, 14–18 rows at last ventral; anal divided (35 of 36 cases) or undivided (one case); snout– vent length
341–1276 mm
; tail length
49–199 mm
,
12.618
–18.862
% of snout–vent length.
Dorsum pale to medium brown; indistinct pattern of darker brown or greyish brown, oblique bands, approximately one dorsal in width, often evident (usually more pronounced laterally and posteriorly); some specimens exhibit a series of indistinct to distinct, broad, darker brown or black bands along body, occasionally with interposed narrower bands; not uncommonly, a broad, dark brown or black band is present on neck; body and neck commonly with scattered dark brown or black scales; frontal, supraoculars and subocular (i.e. 3rd and 4th) supralabials often darker brown; occasionally, entire head dark brown; venter dirty cream or yellow, or medium brown; ventrals commonly exhibit a darker brown sectorial marking laterally; posterior margins of ventrals of some specimens darker brown; chin typically cream or pale yellow; buccal epithelium whitish to pale grey (preserved specimens); iris dark with light orange ring around pupil.
Figure 11.
Geographical distribution of
Pseudonaja aspidorhyncha
specimens examined in this study (closed circles) and/or included in Skinner
et al.
’s (2005) phylogenetic analysis (open circles represent specimens not included in the morphometric analyses). Codes for geographical groups correspond with those in Table 2.
Mengden (1985)
reported a diploid chromosome number of 34, with autosome pairs 4–16 being separable into two distinct size classes, and sex chromosomes that are of equal size.
Distribution:
Southern central
Australia
, south of
27°S
, from Penong, western Eyre Peninsula, to Hermidale, central
New South Wales
(
Fig. 11
).
Notes:
Wells (2002: 6)
erected the name
Pseudonaja gowi
for
Mengden’s (1985)
‘Southern with black nuchal band’ morph. As discussed by
Skinner
et al.
(2005: 569)
, specimens of this morph are part of
P. nuchalis
‘Southern’, so that the name
gowi
is a junior synonym of
aspidorhyncha
.