On the identities of Caecilia degenerata Dunn, 1942 and of C. corpulenta Taylor 1968 (Amphibia: Gymnophiona: Caeciliidae) with descriptions of three new species of Caecilia Linnaeus, 1758 from the Cordillera Oriental of Colombia
Author
Fernández-Roldán, Juan David
0000-0003-2011-3881
fernandezroldanjd@gmail.com
Author
Lynch, John D.
Author
Medina-Rangel, Guido Fabian
Grupo Biodiversidad y Conservación, Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad & Grupo de Morfología y Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá D. C., Colombia.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-01-05
5227
2
205
228
journal article
276838
10.11646/zootaxa.5227.2.3
cf303596-4863-4fcc-8cd6-d92d317cfd23
1175-5326
7518604
7781A542-97A6-4E90-A2FE-20C0650B29B0
Key to the
Caecilia
of the Cordillera Oriental of
Colombia
1. With secondary grooves................................................................................ 2
1’. Without secondary grooves............................................................................. 4
2. 111–132 primary grooves, 0–32 secondaries, a very truncated head in dorsal and ventral view.................
C
.
guntheri
2’. More than 139 primary grooves, and more than 13 secondary grooves............................................ 3
3. 139–163 primary grooves, 21–38 secondaries, a rounded head in dorsal and ventral view, some individuals with an anterior set of secondary grooves past the nuchal collars..........................................
C
.
epicrionopsoides
sp. nov.
3’. 169–276 primary grooves, 13–58 secondaries, a bullet-shaped head in dorsal and ventral view, and a slender and elongated body.......................................................................................
C
.
thompsoni
4. 96–106 primary grooves, straight dentary teeth, and a small terminal shield.........................
C
.
pulchraserrana
4’. More than 120 primary grooves, straight or recurved dentary teeth, and a small or large terminal shield................. 5
5. With subdermal scales within the connective tissue of the skin..................................
C
.
atelolepis
sp. nov.
5’. Without subdermal scales within the connective tissue of the skin.................................................6
6. Straight dentary teeth, large terminal shield, and 120–136 primary grooves...............................
C. orientalis
6’. Recurved dentary teeth................................................................................. 7
7. With large, thick, very recurved dentary teeth, a large terminal shield, and 122–132 primary grooves.
C
.
macrodonta
sp. nov.
7’. With thin, recurved dentary teeth, a small terminal shield, and 133–136 primary grooves...................
C
.
denegerata