On the distribution of the species of the genus Hebius Thompson, 1913 (Squamata Natricidae) in northern Thailand, including the description of a new species and a discussion on snake diversity of this region
Author
Hauser, Sjon
Mu Ban Inthanurak, Wiang Phing Road, Chiang Mai 50100, Thailand.
Author
Smits, Ton
105 Mu, 4 Nong Puen Taek, Song Phi Nong, Kaeng Krachan, Phetchaburi 76170, Thailand.
Author
David, Patrick
Institut de Systématique, Évolution et Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Sorbonne Université, École Pratique des Hautes Études, Université des Antilles, CNRS, CP 30, 57 rue Cuvier, F- 75005 Paris, France.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-03-17
5116
1
1
39
journal article
20194
10.11646/zootaxa.5116.1.1
b2582b88-3f2f-42a1-8bbb-8c8f83381903
1175-5326
6364252
9BF4E28B-2B86-4141-8E90-5F64AD346B7B
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
Figs. 2–9
,
11A
,
12–18
Amphiesma deschauenseei
(juvenile), Plate
76 in
Cox (1991)
.
Holotype
.
QSMI 1686
, an adult male DOR from “Hw
1090,
8.2
km northeast of the bridge over the Mae Klong Khi River at Mae Klong Khi Village” (
16.23661°N
,
98.96871°E
), elevation about
1,209 m
,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
, northwestern
Thailand
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
17 October 2020
.
Status
. Initially, the
holotype
was a relatively intact DOR specimen but part of its tail was missing.
After
complete examination and taking of photographs, the head was cut off and preserved in 95% ethanol, the rest of the body from neck to vent was skinned and the dried skin preserved dry.
Parts
of the tail and some muscle samples were also preserved in 95% ethanol.
Paratypes
(
7 specimens
)
.
1
.
QSMI 1687
.
Male
DOR from “Hw
1090,
16.4
km northeast of the bridge over the Mae Klong Khi River at Mae Klong Khi Village”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,200 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
5 October 2019
.
2
.
QSMI 1688
.
Male
DOR from “Hw
1090,
16.3
km northwest to the bridge over the Mae Klong Khi River at Mae Klong Khi Village”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1, 200 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
5 October 2019
.
3
.
QSMI 1689
.
Male
DOR from “Hw1090 at the village of Rom Klao 4”,
Phop Phra District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,100 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
3 October 2019
.
4
.
QSMI 1690
. DOR from “Hw1099 near the Stupa Monument and Viewpoint north of the village of Ban Musoe Pak Thang”,
Omkoi District
,
Chiang Mai Province
; elevation about
1,372 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
25 June 2019
.
5
.
QSMI 1691
. DOR from “Hw1099 near the southern entrance to the village of Ban Musoe Pak Thang”,
Omkoi District
,
Chiang Mai Province
; elevation about
1,275 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
24 June 2019
.
6
.
QSMI 1692
.
Male
DOR from “Hw
1090
5.4
km east of police checkpoint near (old)
KM 49
marker”,
Phop Phra District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,100 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
27 October 2018
.
7
.
QSMI 1693
.
Male
DOR from “Hw
1090
1.9
km south of Highways Depot, near Umpiam Refugee Camp”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,100m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
20 October 2018
.
Additional specimens (13)
.
1
.
QSMI XX-
13.11.01-21. “Hw
1090,
16.2
km northwest of the bridge over the Mae Klong Khi River at Mae Klong Khi Village”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,200 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
1 November 2013
.
2
.
QSMI 1694
.
Living
subadult from “south of Mae Wa Luang Village”,
Tha Song Yang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
750 m
.
Voucher
photographs taken by
Ton Smits
on
24 September 2018
.
3
.
QSMI 1695
. DOR from “
Hw
1090, near
KM 53
,
4
km east of
Police Check Point
(near
KM 49
),
Phop Phra District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,100 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
10 September 2013
.
4
.
QSMI 1696
. DOR from “Hw
1090
3.5
km south of Highways Depot, near Umpiam Refugee Camp”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,150 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
11 September 2013
.
5
.
QSMI 1697
. DOR from “Hw
1090,
16.2
km northeast of the bridge over the Mae Klong Khi River at Mae Klong Khi Village”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,200 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
1 June 2015
.
6
.
QSMI 1698
. DOR from “Hw
1090
3.2
km south of Highways Depot”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation oabout
1,150 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
9 July 2016
.
7
.
SHPC
09.09.17-04. DOR from “Hw 108, 25 km east of Mae Sariang Town”,
Mae Sariang District
,
Mae Hong Son Province
; elevation about
1,000 m
.
Photographs
taken by
Sjon Hauser
on
17 September 2009
.
8
.
SHPC
11.10.11-14. DOR from “Hw 1090
8 km
south of Highway Depot”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,050 m
.
Voucher
photographs taken by
Sjon Hauser
on
11 October 2011
.
9
.
SHPC
12.10.13-04. DOR from “Hw1090, 16 km northeast of the bridge over the Mae Klong Khi River at Mae Klong Khi Village”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation of about
1,200 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
13 October 2012
.
10
.
SHPC
15.10.21-10. DOR from “a little south of
KM 86
, near the Umpiam Refugee Camp”,
Umphang District
,
Tak Province
; elevation about
1,150 m
. Collected by
Sjon Hauser
on
21 October 2015
.
11
.
SHPC
17.09.09-07. DOR from “Hw105, 25 km north of Mae Salit Luang Village”, Tha Song Yang District,
Tak Province
; elevation about
600 m
.
Collected by Sjon Hauser on
9 September 2017
.
12
.
QSMI 1701
. Living subadult/juvenile “next to a small stream in
Khao Laem National Park
, about
500 m
from the park HQ,”
Sangkhlaburi District
,
Kanchanaburi Province
.
Elevation
about
300 m
.
Photographs
taken by
Ian Dugdale
on
24 March 2017
.
13
.
IDPPA
2021-03
-
09
.
Living
adult resting on “stone in the middle of a stream, about
500 m
north of the HQ, Thong Pha Phum National Park,”
Thong Pha Phum District
,
Kanchanaburi Province
.
Elevation
about
800 m
.
Photographs
taken by
Ian Dugdale
on
9 March 2021
.
Diagnosis (based on the 21 available specimens)
. A medium-sized snake of the genus
Hebius
, defined by the combination of the following characters:
(1)
TaL/TOTL ratio 0.32–0.36 (n=12);
(2)
two preoculars;
(3)
two postoculars (the lower one much smaller than the upper one);
(4)
usually a single elongate anterior temporal followed by two posterior temporals, the upper one much larger than the lower one;
(5)
usually 9 supralabials, 5
th
and 6
th
in contact with eye, 8
th
largest;
(6)
159–171 ventrals plus 1–2 (rarely 3) preventrals;
(7)
cloacal plate divided;
(8)
107–130 divided subcaudals;
(9)
dorsal scales in DSR 19-19-17 (rarely 19-17-17), dorsal keeling variable, most often 17 rows (out of 19) distinctly keeled at midbody, the enlarged scales of the 1
st
DSR smooth;
(10)
reduction of dorsal scale rows from 19 to 17 rows by a reduction involving the 3
rd
and 4
th
DSR, namely 3
rd
+4
th
→ 3
rd
DSR on both sides within five successive ventral plates between the 79
th
to 102
th
ventral scale;
(11)
supralabials cream to pale brown broadly edged and dusted with dark grey; white blotches absent;
(12)
venter immaculate pinkish-cream except for the pale salmon corners of the ventral plates edged with grey and an adjacent cloudy grey spot;
(13)
dorsal coloration pattern variable, most commonly a brown ground color, darker on the top of the dorsum, with a dorsolateral series of some 80 distinct pale ochre-brown to orange-brown rounded blotches on row 6 extending from the neck to the tail with less distinct series of dark blotches below them on row 4 and above them on row 8;
(14)
a bicolored postocular streak to the corner of the jaw, where a characteristic pale ochre-brown pattern extends to the first pale blotch of the dorsolateral row.
Description of the
holotype
.
General morphology
. A male specimen that weighed
31.4 gram
, with SVL
425 mm
and incomplete tail (TaL
162 mm
). Head distinct from the neck; the body is quite round, not laterally compressed. Head length from tip of the snout to the neck (HL1)
21.4 mm
; head moderately elongate (5.0% of SVL); HL2 from tip of the snout to posterior edges of the parietal shields
13.4 mm
. Snout length (rostral tip to posterior edges of prefrontals)
4.1 mm
, 1.8 times as long as horizontal diameter of the eye (of
2.3 mm
); nares distinctly directed dorsolaterally on the snout, round, quite large (diameter
2.3 mm
), 1.5 times as large as the distance between its lower margin and the margin of the lip (
1.5 mm
). Eye medium-sized with a round pupil. Tail broken, remaining proximal part cylindrical. Base of tail with distinct keels.
Size
. SVL:
425 mm
; TaL: not available; HL1:
21.4 mm
; R: not available.
Dentition
. Not available.
Hemipenes.
The everted hemipenes are pinkish-white, short, single, not forked and bulbous; the organ is overall densely covered with tiny, slightly curved spines; spines at the tip of the organ are larger.
FIGURE 2.
An adult living specimen of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
(specimen IDPPA 2021.03.24) resting on a stone in a mountain stream in Kanchanaburi Province. Photo by Ian Dugdale.
FIGURE 3.
Freshly road-killed specimen QSMI 1686, holotype of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
from Umphang District, Tak Province.
A
. Dorsal view (part of tail is broken off).
B
. Ventral view, showing one everted hemipenis.
C
. Upper side of head and neck.
D
. Ventral side of head and neck.
E
. Lateral view of left side of head and neck.
F
. Dried skin of body of holotype from 10
th
ventral plate until cloacal plate.
G
. Details of skin showing dorsal scale row reductions behind midbody from 19 to 17. On the left side the 4
th
row fuses into the 3th row at level V97 to V98. On the right side this reduction occurs at level V96 to V97. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 4. A
. Dorsolateral view of the right side of the head of paratype 2, specimen QSMI 1688, from Umphang District, Tak Province. Photo by Sjon Hauser.
B
. Lateral view of the left side of the head of specimen QSMI 1694 from Tha Song Yang District, Tak. Photo by Ton Smits.
In both specimens there are 2 preoculars, 2 postoculars, 5 temporals 1+2+2 (the lower first posterior temporal much smaller than the upper one), 9 supralabials, the 1
st
to 4
th
relatively small and rectangular, the 5
th
and 6
th
larger and in contact with the eye, the 8
th
the largest and in broad contact with the elongated anterior temporal. In addition, the broad, bicolored postocular streak is very similar in both photographs.
FIGURE 5.
Examples of dorsal skins at midbody of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
A
. Holotype, specimen QSMI 1686, from Umphang.
B
. Paratype 2, specimen QSMI 1688, from Umphang.
C
. Paratype 3, QSMI 1689, from Phop Phra.
D
. Paratype 4, specimen QSMI 1690, from Omkoi. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 6. A
. Dorsal view of Paratype 7, specimen QSMI 1693 from Umphang District, Tak Province.
B
. Dorsal view of Additional Specimen QSMI 1695 from Phop Phra District, Tak Province. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 7. A
. The ventral coloration pattern of the anterior part of the body of Paratype 3 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
, specimen QSMI 1689, a male from Phop Phra District, Tak Province.
B
. Ventral view of the posterior end of the body of Paratype 3 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
, specimen QSMI 1689, a male from Phop Phra District, Tak Province. The cloudy, ventral spots are larger, darker and nearly fused with the dark-edged corners of the ventral plates, but never intensely dark and closely set. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
Body scalation
. DSR: 19-19-17 scales, scales rhombohedral, not notched at their distal end, with moderately strong keels at midbody, except for the smooth, slightly enlarged scales of the 1
st
DSR; vertebral scales not enlarged; scales around the base of the tail distinctly keeled,
not
strongly keeled; the reduction from 19 to 17 dorsal scale rows takes place between the 95
th
and 98
th
ventral plate; at level V96 on the right side, the 3
rd
scale row fuses with 4
th
row fuse to become row 3; and at level V97 on the left side scale row 3 and 4 fuse to become row 3; 168 ventral plates + 2 preventrals; SC not available (tail truncated), all paired; cloacal plate divided.
FIGURE 8. A
. Ventral view of the anterior part of the body of DOR Additional Specimen 7, SHPC11.10.11-14 from Umphang District, Tak Province, showing the ‘golden-salmon’ pigment accumulations along the edges of the first row of dorsal scales and the corners of the ventral plates, and extending less densely to the edges of the second dorsal row.
B
. Details of Fig. 11, showing that the pigment accumulations along the edges of the second dorsal row are less dense compared to the first row and ventral corners, and broken up into distinct grains. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 9.
A partially everted hemipenis of paratype 7 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1693 from Umphang District, Tak Province. Photo by Sjon Hauser.
Head scalation
. Arrangement of upper head scales complete, including 2 internasals, 2 prefrontals, 2 supraoculars, 1 frontal, and two parietals. Rostral wider than high, not visible from above; nasals subrectangular, distinctly elongate, divided above and below the quite large, central naris; internasals subtriangular, in broad contact with each other, wider than long, narrowing anteriorly; 2 prefrontals, subrectangular, much larger than internasals; frontal hardly longer than wide, longer than prefrontal, the anterior edge perpendicular to the longitudinal axis. Parietals large, suture between them barely longer than the frontal; 2/2 preoculars; 2/2 postoculars, upper one much larger than lower one; left loreal trapezoid, a little longer than high; right loreal rectangular, nearly twice as long as high; 9/9 supralabials, 5
th
and 6
th
in contact with eye, 7
th
and 8
th
largest; 5/5 temporals in formula 1 + 2 + 2, anterior temporal elongate, disk-shaped/ flattened hexagonal, upper temporal of second row much larger than lower one (both sides); infralabials much damaged posteriorly on both sides, 1
st
to 5
th
IL in contact with anterior shin shields; posterior shin shields longer than anterior ones.
Coloration of freshly killed
holotype
and its dried skin.
Head and neck
. The upper side of the head and neck is dark brown with some greyish vermiculation. Supralabials are cream or pale ochre-brown with their edges dark grey and surroundings peppered with grey. The eye is round, quite large, with a round, black pupil with a yellow halo; the iris is pale brown mottled and peppered with black. An oblique, bicolored postocular streak (upper side pale yellowish-brown or yellow-ochre, lower side dark brown) traverses the anterior temporal shield and the 8
th
and 9
th
supralabials, dividing these shields in a pale- and dark-colored section. At the corner of the upper jaw the dark part of the streak fuses with the dark brown ground color of the neck, the pale ochre part meanders in the characteristic pattern of a curved bar with knobs towards the midline of the neck and fuses with the first, most anterior pale blotch of the dorsolateral row of blotches.
Dorsal side of the body and tail
. The dorsum is dark brown in the central nine scale rows, gradually a little lighter greyish-brown in the lateral rows, with the enlarged outermost row distinctly paler, its centre ochre-brown, edged by grey. A dorsolateral series of roundish pale ochre- or orange-brown blotches the size of one scale (plus parts of the surrounding scales) stretches from the neck to the tail on row 6, each spot separated from the next one by one brown scale (see
Figs. 3
,
5A
). These dorsolateral blotches are aligned on a diffuse stripe, slightly paler than the dark brown ground color; the blotches are all of similar size and distinct until the very posterior end of the body where they become smaller and indistinct and fade away on the tail; another series of lateral dark brown blotches on dorsal row 4 below each ochre- or orange-brown spot. About 80 blotches are distinct in each row. The upper side of the tail is uniformly dark brown.
Lower side of head and neck, body and tail
. Infralabials and chin shields are white to cream. The venter immaculate pinkish-white/cream except for the corners of the ventral plates which are salmon, laterally edged or peppered with grey; there is a cloudy grey spot near the corner. Anteriorly these spots are rather vague, cloudy-amoeboid, posteriorly they are slightly larger, denser, darker and more distinct.
The lower side of the (incomplete) tail is densely peppered with grey, most densely at the lateral sides of the (divided) subcaudals.
Habitat
. The
holotype
was collected on a road traversing low montane evergreen forest. Next to the road tiny streams of rain water run off were hidden in the dense vegetation (
Fig. 10A
). Some
50 m
south of the site, a little fast-flowing stream cascades into a pool that drains under the road onto a steep mountain slope on the other side. Around the pool bushes of large,
1–2 m
high members of the Zingeriberaceae and
Phlogacanthus curviflorus
(Wallich), and also stands of bamboo. The forest around the pool is inhabited by numerous other snake species, including
Hebius khasiensis, Psammodynastes
pulverulentus
(H. Boie
in
F. Boie),
Sibynophis collaris
(Gray),
Lycodon
chapaensis
(Angel & Bourret)
, previously
Lycodon septentrionalis
(Günther) (see
Wang
et al
. 2021
),
Pareas hamptoni
(Boulenger),
Pareas macularius
Theobald,
Rhabdophis nigrocinctus
(Blyth)
and
Trimeresurus popeiorum
Smith.
Description of the
paratypes
and variation
. A summary of morphological and meristic data of the
seven paratypes
is given in
Table 1
. For photographs of these
paratypes
, see
Figures 12–18
. Morphological data, often incomplete, of twelve additional, much damaged DORs or living specimens are summarized in
Appendix 2
.
Variation of the head scalation and coloration of the head
The head scalation of the
paratypes
is similar to that of the
holotype
. Differences occur in the number of supralabials, of temporals and the shape of the loreal.
There are always 2 preoculars (on both sides); there are nearly always 2 postoculars (on both sides) but in a few cases (3 out of 18 occurrences) it
appeared
that the two were fused to one; in a few specimens (3 out of 17) a side of the head has 10 supralabials (vs.
9 in
the
holotype
and in most of the
paratypes
); the loreal is rectangular, usually longer than high, the ratio length/height varying from 1.2 to 2.0. In
one specimen
, the loreal is slightly trapezoid-shaped; there is mostly 1 elongated anterior temporal followed by 2 posterior temporals (in 14 out of 17 occurrences), the upper one much larger than the lower one. However, the second row of posterior temporals shows more variation (2, 3 or 4) or damage means the number of shields hard to count accurately.
TABLE 1.
Data on the morphology of the holotype and seven paratypes of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
Data
|
Holotype QSMI 1686
|
Paratype 1 QSMI 1687
|
Paratype 2 QSMI 1688
|
Paratype 3 QSMI 1689
|
Paratype 4 QSMI 1690
|
Paratype 5 QSMI 1691
|
Paratype 6 QSMI 1692
|
Paratype 7 QSMI 1693
|
Origin |
Umphang |
Umphang |
Umphang |
Phop Phra |
Omkoi |
Omkoi |
Phop Phra |
Umphang |
Sex |
male |
male |
male |
male |
n.a. |
n.a. |
male |
male |
SVL (mm) |
425 |
306 |
408 |
360 |
239 |
277 |
319 |
263 |
TaL (mm) |
162+* |
75+* |
195 |
172 |
118 |
155 |
179 |
131 |
TOTL (mm) |
587+* |
381+* |
603 |
532 |
347 |
432 |
498 |
394 |
TaL/TOTL (%) |
27.6+* |
19.7+* |
32.3 |
32.3 |
34.0 |
35.9 |
35.9 |
33.2 |
Ventral plates (preventrals) |
168 (2) |
168 (1) |
170 (2) |
160 (1) |
160 (1) |
171 (1) |
165 (2) |
166 (2) |
Cloacal plate (CP) |
divided |
?? |
divided |
divided |
divided |
divided |
divided |
divided |
SC (pairs) |
80+* |
62+* |
107 |
111 |
116 |
130 |
126 |
119 |
DSR |
19-19-17 |
19-19-17 |
19-19-17 |
19-19(18)-17 |
19-17(18)-17 |
19-19-17 |
19-19-17?? |
19-19-17 |
19 >> 17 between Vx-Vy |
V98-V103 |
n.a.* |
V93-V97 |
V79-V83 |
V70-V74 |
V102-V103 |
n.a. |
V95-V100 |
Keeled r. at MB (tot. r.) |
17 (19) distinct |
17 (19) weak |
17 (19) distinct |
7 weakly |
9 (17) very weak |
17 (from 19) |
not distinct |
9 weakly |
Sup.lab.L;contact eye; largest |
9; 4-5-6; 7 or 8 |
n.a.* |
9; 5-6; 7 or 8 |
10; 5-6-7; 8 |
9; 5-6; 8 |
9; 5-6; 8 |
10; 5-6-7; 9? |
9; 5-6-7; 8 |
Sup.lab.R;contact eye; largest |
9; 4-5-6; 8 |
9; 5-6; 7 or 8 |
9; 5-6; 7 or 8 |
9(10); 5-6; 7 |
9; 5-6-7; 7, 8 or 9 |
9; 4-5; 7 |
9; 5-6; 8? |
9; 5-6-7; 8 |
Sup.lab. edged or dusted grey |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
Sup.lab. cream or pale brown |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
yes |
L-yes; R-yes |
Sup.lab. with white blotches |
L-no; R-no |
L-no; R-no |
L-no; R-no |
L-no; R-no |
L-no; R-no |
L-no; R-no |
not distinct |
L-no; R-no |
temporals (AT,PT1,PT2) |
L-123; R-12x* |
L-123; R-123 |
R-122;L-113 |
L-122;R-122 |
L-122?;R-122 |
L-123;R-124 |
L-222*;R-113? |
L-123,R-123 |
Preoculars (left and right) |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
Postoculars (left and right) |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
1 and 1 (?) |
2 and x? |
2 and 2 |
1 and 2 |
2 and 2 |
Loreal .. x longer than high |
1.3 and 1.7 |
1.3; pentag. |
1.5 and 1.5 |
2 and 2 |
1.5 and 1.5 |
2 and 1.5 |
1.5 and x? |
x? and 1.5 |
Ant. edge frontal straight? |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
damaged |
yes |
Venter pinkish cream |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
Corners V pale orange-brown |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
?? |
yes |
Spots corners V cloudy grey |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
Ground colour dorsum |
dark brown |
dark brown |
dark brown |
dark brown |
brown |
brown |
dark brown |
dark brown |
Dorsolat.series pale blotches |
distinct |
disctinct |
distinct |
vague |
very vague |
distinct |
distinct |
no |
r1,19 pale orange-brown edged, clouded with grey |
yes |
yes |
yes |
ant. vague |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
SC-pairs clouded with grey |
yes |
yes, laterally |
mottled |
only distally |
densely |
densely |
densely |
yes |
Postocular bicolored streak |
distinct |
distinct |
distinct |
very vague |
distinct |
distinct |
distinct? |
no |
tailbase keeled? |
distinctly |
strongly |
strongly |
distinctly |
distinctly |
distinctly |
distinctly |
strongly |
* = broken, much damaged
The supralabials are nearly always edged or peppered with grey, but there is considerable variation in the degree of this pigmentation between the specimens, e.g. sometimes the peppering extends to cover nearly half of the shield. The postocular streak and its characteristic extension towards dorsal row 6 of the neck is distinct and conspicuous in more than half of the specimens, but in other specimens (pale morphs) it was vague or could not be clearly distinguished.
Variation of the dorsal scale row reduction of 19 to 17 rows
The skins of
seven specimens
were quite complete and the dorsal scale row reductions of from 19 to 17 rows could be determined accurately. In
two specimens
this reduction was on one or on both sides aberrant in the sense that a reduction was reversed by a division to the original rows, and subsequently two or three scale lengths posteriorly there was again a fusion which resulted in the stable lower number of rows. These reductions and divisions are summarized below.
QSMI 1686
(
holotype
) left side
:
V097
-
V098
=3+4→3 right side:
V096
-
V097
=3+4→3
QSMI 1688
(
paratype
2) left side
:
V093
-
V094
=3+4→3 right side:
V093
-
V094
=3+4→3
QSMI 1689
(
paratype
3) left side
:
V079
-
V080
=4+5→4 right side:
V082
-
V083
=3+4→3
QSMI 1690
(
paratype
4) left side
:
V070
-
V071
=3+4→3 right side:
V073
-
V074
=3+4→3
V075
-
V076
=3→3+4
V078
-
V079
=3+4→3
QSMI 1691
(
paratype
5) left side
:
V102
-
V103
=3+4→3 right side:
V102
-
V103
=3+4→3
QSMI 1693
(
paratype
7) left side
:
V094
-
V095
=3+4→3
V095
-
V096
=3→4+5
V096
-
V097
=4+5→4 right side:
V095
-
V096
=4+5→4
V096
-
V097
=4→4+5
V097
-
V098
=4+5→4
QSMI 1698
(additional 7) left side: V089-V090=3+4→3 right side: V088-V089=3+4→3
Variation of the dorsal pattern of coloration
The dorsolateral row of pale ochre/orange blotches on the 6
th
DSR is by far the most conspicuous pattern in a majority of specimens. This row extends from the neck to the tail without fusing into a stripe, but it is situated on a vague continuous stripe darker than the blotches but lighter than the background color. Adjacent contrasting dark blotches on the 4
th
and 8th dorsal scale rows, distinctly darker than the brown ground color, accentuate the pale blotches on both sides. In some specimens, these dark blotches become more conspicuous, while at the same time the pale blotches have faded to a considerable degree (see
Fig. 5D
of the skin of specimen QSMI 1690 from Omkoi). In other specimens, the overall color is much paler, such as pale greenish bronze-brown, without any conspicuous pale blotches on the paler dorsolateral stripe, which remains clearly visible, and with only numerous, rather inconspicuous darker spots present, as is illustrated in
Fig. 6A
for specimen QSMI 1693 from Umphang District. In a few specimens, the dorsum is nearly uniformly pale greyish-brown without distinct spots and with only a remnant of the pale dorsolateral stripe, as is illustrated in
Fig. 6B
for specimen QSMI 1695 from Phop Phra District. In both pale morphs, however, traces of the full-developped coloration pattern of a series of blotches can be seen. In these pale morphs the postocular streak is generally either vague or absent, whereas the underside of the tail is nearly white (vs. dark grey in the more colorful specimens with pronounced blotches). However, in these pale morphs the cloudy spots near the corners of the ventral plates are always distinct.
Coloration pattern of the venter
The color of the ventral plates is pinkish-white with the corners of these plates pale salmon. The pale salmon color of the corners usually extends to the first dorsal row (adjacent to the ventral plates). At the border of the pale salmon corner of the ventral plate and their pinkish-white central part is an inconspicuous greyish-brown spot that is cloudy and usually amoeboid-shaped or a vague short streak (see
Fig. 7A
). This pattern is best shown anteriorly, whereas posteriorly the pinkish-white background color of the spots may change to a very pale brownish-white and the spots often become darker, denser and more closely set in the corner of the ventral plate, but never
intensely
dark (see
Fig. 7B
).
Salmon pigment accumulations
. A peculiar characteristic of the coloration pattern of the species consists of the salmon (pale orange) color covering the corners of the ventral plates and the first row of dorsal scales, sometimes extending to the second row, in the ventrolateral area of the anterior part of the body. This pigmentation is strongly concentrated along the edges of these plates and scales. We recorded these accumulations in a good number of the DOR-specimens, but they are particularly conspicuous in specimen SHPC11.10.11-14 (see
Fig. 8A and 8B
).
These pigment accumulations also appear to be present in specimen QSMI 1694, a living individual from Tha Song Yang District,
Tak Province
.
FIGURE 10:
Habitat of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
A
. Habitat of the holotype, specimen QSMI 1686. Run offs of rain water and tiny streams were hidden in the dense vegetation of partly degraded evergreen forest at 1,250–1,300 m.
B
: A little stream amidst ‘ancient’ evergreen forest in Tak’s Umphang District, at an elevation of 1,230 m. The picture shows the site where the stream enters a large concrete drain under the road to re-emerge on the other side. Over the past ten years, some eight roadkilled specimens of
H. terrakarenorum
were found within a distance of 100 m from this site.
C.
A fast flowing forest stream amidst evergreen forest in Tak’s Tha Song Yang District, at an elevation of 600 m, habitat of specimen SHPC17.09.09-07. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 11. A
.
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
A1–3: Specimen QSMI 1694 from Tha Song Yang District, Tak Province. Photos by Ton Smits.
B.
Hebius igneus
. B1–3: Specimen QSMI 1713 from Bo Kluea District, Nan Province. Photos by Ton Smits.
C
.
Hebius deschauenseei
. C1–2. Specimen SHPC14.05.14-01, a subadult from Doi Suthep, Mueang District, Chiang Mai Province. C3. Subadult DOR specimen SHPC11.06.28-05 Mae Taeng District, Chiang Mai Province. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
D
.
Hebius khasiensis
. D1–2. Specimen SHPC11.10.15-05 from Umphang District, Tak Province. D3. Ventral view of specimen SHPC20.06.24-09 from Omkoi District, Chiang Mai Province. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
E
.
Hebius cf. khasiensis
. E1–3 Specimen QSMI 1727 from Bo Kluea District, Nan Province. Photos by Ton Smits.
F
.
Hebius bitaeniatus
. F1–F3: Specimen QSMI XX- 14.09.29-06 from Mae Wang District, Chiang Mai Province. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 12.
Paratype 1 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1687 from Umphang District, Tak Province.
A
. Dorsal view.
B
. Ventral view.
C.
Upper side of head and neck.
D
. Lateral view of head and neck.
E
. Ventral side of head and neck. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 13.
Paratype 2 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1688 from Umphang District, Tak Province.
A
. Dorsal view
B
. Ventral view, showing two everted hemipenes.
C
. Upper side of head. D. Dorsolateral view of right side of head.
E
. Dried skin of body from neck until cloacal plate.
F
. Details of skin showing dorsal scale row reductions behind midbody from 19 to 17. On the left side the 4
th
row fuses into the 3th row at level V93 to V94. On the right side this reduction also occurs at level V93 to V94. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 14.
Paratype 3 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1689 from Phop Phra District, Tak Province.
A
. Dorsal view
B
. Ventral view, showing one everted, damaged hemipenis.
C
. Upper side of head and neck.
D
. Ventral side of head and neck.
E
. Lateral view of left side of head and neck.
F
. Dried skin of body from neck until cloacal plate (2 pieces).
G
. Details of skin showing dorsal scale row reductions behind midbody from 19 to 17. On the left side the 5
th
row fuses into the 4th row at level V78 to V79. On the right side the fourth row fuses into the 3
rd
row at level V82 to V83. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 15.
Paratype 4 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1690 from Omkoi District, Chiang Mai Province.
A
. Dorsal view.
B
. Ventral view, showing one partly everted hemipenis.
C
. Upper side of head and neck.
D
. Ventral side of head and neck.
E
. Dried skin of body from neck until cloacal plate.
F
. Details of skin showing dorsal scale row reductions just before midbody from 19 to 17. On the left side the 4
th
row fuses into the 3th row at level V70 to V71. On the right side this reduction occurs at level V73 to V74 and following an inversion this reduction occurs again at level V78 to V79. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 16.
Paratype 5 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1691 from Omkoi District, Chiang Mai Province.
A
. Dorsal view.
B
. Ventral view, distinctly showing the divided cloacal plate.
C
. Upper side of head and neck.
D
. Lateral view of right side of head and neck. E. Ventral side of head and neck.
F
. Dried skin of body from neck until cloacal plate.
G
. Details of skin showing dorsal scale row reductions behind midbody from 19 to 17. On the left side the 4
th
row fuses into the 3th row at level V102 to V103. On the right side this reduction also occurs at level V102 to V103. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 17.
Paratype 6 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1692 from Phop Phra District, Tak Province.
A
. Dorsal view.
B
. Ventral view, showing two partly everted hemipenes.
C
. Ventral view of the tail.
D
. Dorsolateral view of head and neck.
E
. Ventral side of head and neck. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
FIGURE 18.
Paratype 7 of
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
, specimen QSMI 1693 from Umphang District, Tak Province.
A
. Dorsal view.
B
. Ventral view, showing one completely everted hemipenis.
C
. Upper side of head and neck.
D
. Ventral side of head and neck.
E
. Dried skin of body from neck until cloacal plate.
F
. Details of skin showing dorsal scale row reductions behind midbody from 19 to 17. On the left side the eduction is complicated at level V94 to V96. On the right side the reduction is also complex and occurs at level V94 to V98. Photos by Sjon Hauser.
Hemipenes.
We everted specimens of specimens QSMI 1686 and QSMI 1693. They show that the hemipenis of this species is short, single, not forked and bulbous; the proximal part is short (or less prone to be everted following pressure on the base of the tail) with some large basal spines; the distal part is slightly pear-shaped and densely covered with many short, curved spines, their tip pointing downwards in the direction of the vent; among these tiny spines may be seen a number of much larger spines similarly curved and directed downwards; spines at the tip of the organ are larger. The sulcus is divided near the base but this forking is just short and cannot be distinguished more proximally where it seems to “disappear” amidst the spines (
Fig. 9
). Lips of the sulcus are not prominent.
Etymology
. The species nomen
terrakarenorum
is a modern Latin noun meaning “Land of the Karen”. It refers to the Karen People, the major inhabitants of the mountains throughout the hitherto known range of the new species. This species nomen is a noun at the plural genitive case, not an adjective.
We suggest the colloquial names: Karenland Keelback (English),
Hébius du Pays Karen (French)
, Karenland Wassernatter (German) and Ngu Lai Sap Thin Kariang (Thai). It is likely that the species also occurs in ‘Karen country’, namely in the mountainous part of eastern
Myanmar
adjacent to the Thai-Myanmar border, which remains a herpetologically extremely under-explored region.
Distribution and habitat
. This species is definitely known from the provinces of
Chiang Mai
,
Mae Hong Son
,
Tak
and
Kanchanaburi
(see
Fig. 1
). Mae Sariang District,
Mae Hong Son Province
, is the northernmost locality where we have recorded a specimen. Nevertheless, it is possible that the range extends further northward in Mae La Noi, Khun Yuan and even Mueang districts of
Mae Hong Son Province
, which still are herpetologically poorly surveyed areas. The
type
locality of the species is at the edge of the mountains just north to Umphang valley. It is most likely that the species occurs in mountain streams south of that valley. The most southern localities are
120 to 150 km
to south in
Kanchanaburi Province
, in central
Thailand
, beyond the northern Thai region. A picture of a juvenile
Hebius
taken by Jarujin Nabhitabhata and identified as
H. deschauenseei
in
Cox (1991)
is probably a misidentification and instead is a juvenile
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
This specimen might have originated from
Uthai Thani Province
(south of Umphang) as
Uthai Thani
was mentioned both in
Cox (1991)
,
Cox
et al
. (2012)
and Chan-ard
et al
. 2015 (see also
David
et al
. 2021
) as part of the range of
H. deschauenseei
, without reference to a preserved specimen or voucher photographs. To us
Uthai Thani Province
seems unlikely as home of
H. deschauenseei
as we have never come across it to the south of Doi Inthanon National Park, in spite of quite extensive field surveys in Chiang Mai’s Omkoi District and in much of
Tak Province
.
Biology.
Nearly all specimens were found next to fast-flowing mountain streams. For examples of three different habitats, see
Fig. 10. A
majority of the road-killed specimens were male and many of them were collected in October, which suggests that the main mating season might be at the end of the rainy season in October. This might indicate that beyond the mating season these snakes rarely venture beyond the direct surroundings of the streams. A living specimen captured and handled by the second author was docile and did not strike or bite, which is in line with the behavior of other
Hebius
species
known from
Thailand
and elsewhere.
Comparisons of
Hebius terrakarenorum
spec. nov.
with other species
.
In many characters,
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
is similar to
H. igneus
David, Vogel, Nguyen, Orlov, Pauwels, Teynié & Ziegler, 2021
. It can be distinguished from the latter by (1) the immaculate pinkish-cream venter except for the grey-edged corners of the ventral plates and a modest, cloudy grey dot in or near that corner (vs. three or four parallel rows, often fused, of very distinct blackish blotches largely darkening the ventral surface in
H. igneus
), (2) the distinctly but moderately keeled scales at the tail base (vs. strongly keeled in
H. igneus
), (3) the row of pale ochre dorsal blotches that remain separate posteriorly (vs. usually fused into a lateral stripe posteriorly of midbody in
H. igneus
), and (4) the reduction of 19 → 17 DSR in
H. terrakarenorum
follows a different pattern to that of
H. igneus
.
In
H. terrakarenorum
the reduction of DSR 3+4 → 3 is on both sides within a space of no more than 5 ventral plates, so there is only a short section of less than 3 ventral plates of the total body length that is spanned by 18 dorsal rows, but in
H. igneus
the reduction implies DSR 4+5 → 4 at V85–98 on the left and at V100–103 on the right, so the part of the body spanned by 18 dorsal scale rows can be as long as 15 successive ventral plates, see
David
et al.
(2021)
. The number of ventrals of the new species (159–171, n=19) is not significantly different from the Chinese and Vietnamese populations of
H. igneus
(159–165, n=9,
David
et al
. 2021
), but lower than in the
Hebius igneus
population of eastern North
Thailand
(168–178, n=5, see results).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
resembles
H. deschauenseei
(Taylor)
but can be distinguished from the latter by (1) the pattern of two rows of modest, cloudy dots on the otherwise immaculate cream belly (vs. three parallel rows of very distinct dark blotches partly blackening the venter in
H. deschauenseei
), (2) the higher number of 159–171 ventral plates (vs.
148–163 in
H. deschauenseei
) and (3) the usual 2 rows of ochre- or orange-brown dorsal spots extending towards the tail (vs. only spotted anteriorly).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
superficially resembles
Hebius clerki
(Wall)
from Northern
India
and North
Myanmar
, as the dorsum of both species is usually adorned with two rows of distinct pale brown blotches and both have a postocular streak that extends to the neck in a characteristic way. However, there are many differences that easily distinguish these species apart, as follows: (1)
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
has a longer tail with a relative tail length R of 0.32–0.36 (vs.
0.26–0.33 in
H. clerki
), (2) a higher number of subcaudal pairs of 107–130 (vs.
63–77 in
H. clerki
), (3) a usual number of 9 supralabials (vs. mostly
8 in
H. clerki
), (4) the presence of 1 anterior temporal (vs. 1 or
2 in
H. clerki
), and (5) the cloudy amoeboid spots in/near the corner of the ventral plates (vs. dark streaklike spots in
H. clerki
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from its sympatric congener
Hebius khasiensis
(Boulenger)
by (1) its pale brown/cream supralabials (vs. supralabials with large ovoid or triangle-shaped, ivory blotches in
H. khasiensis
), (2) the greyish-brown cloudy, amoeboid spots in/near the corners of the ventral plates (vs. dark brown, rectangular and closely set in the corners in
H. khasiensis
), (3) the much higher number of ventral plates of 159–171 (vs. 139–149, in western
Thailand
) and (4) upper dorsal scales moderately keeled (vs. strongly keeled in
H. khasiensis
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius bitaeniatus
(Wall)
by (1) most usually spotted dorsal pattern (vs. two distinct unbroken ochre-brown lateral stripes edged with black in
H. bitaeniatus
), (2) its modest keeling (vs. nearly all rows
strongly
keeled in
H. bitaeniatus
), (3) the cloudy, amoeboid ventral spots adjacent to the corners of the ventral plates (vs. dark brown short stripes in
H. bitaeniatus
) and (4) its higher number of subcaudal pairs (107–130 vs.
80–100 in
H. bitaeniatus
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius groundwateri
(Smith)
by (1) its higher number of 159–171 ventral plates (vs.
147–154 in
H. groundwateri
), (2) its divided cloacal plate (vs. entire in
H. groundwateri
) and (3) the number of 19 rows of dorsal scales at midbody (vs.
17 in
H. groundwateri
).
Among other species,
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius boulengeri
(Gressitt)
,
Hebius leucomystax
(David, Bain, Nguyen, Orlov, Vogel, Vu & Ziegler)
, and
Hebius inas
(Laidlaw)
by its pale brown supralabials (vs. supralabials with ivory white blotches in
H. boulengeri
and
H. inas
, and entirely white in
H. leucomystax
) and moderately strong dorsal keels (vs. strong dorsal keels in
H. boulengeri
,
H. leucomystax
and
H. inas
).
The pinkish-white belly and the 19 rows of dorsal scales at midbody distinguish
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
from
Hebius venningi
(Wall)
,
Hebius nigriventer
(Wall)
,
Hebius taronensis
(Smith)
,
Hebius chapaensis
(Bourret)
and
Hebius annamensis
(Bourret)
that have 17 or 15 dorsal rows at midbody) and a dark venter, except
H. annamensis
in which the venter is largely pale. These species have recently been revised by
David
et al
. (2021)
.
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius modestus
(Günther)
by its higher number of 159–171 ventral scales (vs.
143–163 in
H. modestus
), a distinct postocular streak (vs. absent in
H. modestus
) and the light-colored pinkish-white belly (vs. a mostly pale brown, edged with dark grey venter in
H. modestus
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished by its 19 rows of dorsal scales at midbody from
H. atemporalis
(Bourret)
,
H. sauteri
(Boulenger)
,
H. arquus
(David and Vogel)
,
H. frenatus
(Dunn),
H. sarawacensis
(Günther)
, all with 17 rows at midbody.
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius metusia
(Inger, Zhao, Shaffer & Wu)
by the absence of
sharp
, well-defined dorsolateral stripes (vs. present in
H. metusia
)
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius andreae
(Ziegler and Le)
from
Vietnam
by its lower number (159–171) of ventral plates (vs.
179–180 in
H. andreae
) and higher number (107–130) of subcaudal pairs (vs.
99–103 in
H. andreae
). Moreover, the new species has 2 pre- and 2 postoculars (vs. 1 and 3 respectively in
H. andreae
), and it lacks a conspicuous dorsal pattern of pale, black-edged crossbars on the anterior body (vs. present in
H. andreae
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
can be distinguished from
Hebius octolineatus
(Boulenger)
,
H
.
septemlineatus
(Schmidt) and
Hebius parallelus
(Boulenger)
by the absence of distinct dorsolateral stripes (vs. present in
H. octolineatus
and
H. parallelus
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
is differentiated from
Hebius flavifrons
(Boulenger)
and
Hebius nicobariensis
(Sclater)
by its divided cloacal plate (vs. entire in
H. flavifrons
and
H. nicobariensis
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
differs from
Hebius sangzhiensis
Zhou, Qi, Lu, Lyu & Li
in
Zhou, Sun, Qi, Lu, Lyu, Wang, Li & Ma by its larger number (107–130) of subcaudal pairs (vs.
81–82 in
H. sangzhiensis
), higher (0.32–0.36) relative tail length (vs.
0.24–0.27 in
H. sangzhiensis
) and the number of 9 supralabials (vs. 8 or
7 in
H. sangzhiensis
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be separated from
Hebius beddomei
(Günther)
,
H. kerinciensis
(David & Das),
Hebius petersii
(Boulenger)
and
Hebius viperinus
(Schenkel)
by having more ventral scales, 159–171, vs.
140–150 in
H. beddomei
,
140 in
H. kerinciensis
,
134–150 in
H. petersii
, and
101 in
H. viperinus
.
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
can be distinguished from
Hebius concelarus
(Malnate)
,
Hebius ishigakiensis
(Malnate & Munsterman)
and
Hebius optatus
(Hu and Zhao)
by the absence of dorsal crossbars (vs. distinct crossbars in
H. concelarus
,
H. ishigakiensis
and
H. optatus
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
is different from
Hebius celebicus
(Peters & Doria)
and
H. sarasinorum
(Boulenger)
by its number of DSRs of 19-19(17)-17 (vs. 15-15-
15 in
both
H. celebicus
and
H. sarasinorum
), higher number (159–171) of ventral plates (vs.
125–150 in
H. celebicus
and
137–146 in
H. sarasinorum
) and much higher number (107–130) of subcaudal pairs (vs.
45–75 in
H. celebicus
and
64–75 in
H. sarasinorum
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
can be distinguished from
Hebius craspedogaster
(Boulenger)
by its dorsolateral series of pale brown blotches (vs. a series of small, black-edged, white spots in
H
.
craspedogaster
) and cloudy, distinctly spaced ventral spots (vs. ventral spots that are almost in contact with each other in
H
.
craspedogaster
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is different from
Hebius johannis
(Boulenger)
by its usual pattern of two rows of dorsolateral blotches and the moderate but distinct keels of the dorsal scales (vs. a variegated or reticulated dorsal pattern and smooth or weakly keeled scales in
H. johannis
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is different from
Hebius lacrima
Purkayastha & David
by the absence of distinct white blotches on the supralabials (vs. present in
H. lacrima
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is different from
Hebius miyajimae
(Maki)
by a series of distinct pale blotches (vs. well-defined dorsolateral stripes in
H. miyajimae
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is different from
Hebius popei
(Schmidt)
by the absence of distinct dorsolateral stripes and the relatively high number of 159–171 ventral plates (vs. presence of dorsolateral stripes and 130–142 ventral plates).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
can be distinguished from
Hebius pryeri
(Boulenger)
by its brown dorsal ground color with a dorsolateral series of pale blotches (vs. blackish with pale crossbars in
H. pryeri
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is different from
Hebius sanguineus
(Smedley)
from West
Malaysia
by its dorsal color pattern of brown with dorsolateral rows of pale blotches (vs. brick red flanks and brown reticulated upper part of the dorsum in
H. sanguineus
) and higher number (159–171) of ventral plates (vs.
140–155 in
H. sanguineus
)
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is different from
H. vibakari
(H. Boie)
by its pale brown supralabials (vs. large white roundish blotches in
H. vibakari
) and the dorsum with series of blotches (vs. nearly unpatterned in
H. vibakari
)
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
is distinguished from
Hebius yanbianensis
Liu, Zhong, Wang, Liu & Guo
by the presence of 2 postoculars (vs.
3 in
H. yanbianensis
), its long tail with a TaL/TOTL ratio of 0.32–0.36 (vs.
0.26 in
H. yanbianensis
), its high number of 107–130 subcaudals pairs (vs.
90 in
H. yanbianensis
) and its rows of cloudy ventral spots (vs. intense dark, closely set blotches in
H. yanbianensis
).
Three species placed until recently in the genus
Hebius
have now be referred to two other genera (see
Das
et al
. 2020
;
Lalronunga
et al
. 2020
;
Deepak
et al
. 2021
).
H. terrakarenorum
sp. nov.
differs from
Herpetoreas pealii
(Sclater)
by having more (159–171) ventral scales (
vs.
142–144 in
Herpetoreas pealii
.
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
differs from
Herpetoreas xenura
(Wall)
by its paired subcaudals (vs. single subcaudals in
Herpetoreas xenura
). Finally,
Hebius terrakarenorum
sp. nov
.
differs from
Amphiesma monticola
(Jerdon)
by its number of ventral plates, 159–171 vs.
136–144 in
A. monticola
, and a much distinct dorsal pattern.
Morphological data used in the comparisons above have been taken from
Boulenger (1890
;
1893
),
Das
et al
. (2020)
,
David
et al
. (2005
;
2007
;
2013
; 2015a-b, 2021),
Deepak
et al
. (2021)
,
De Lang & Vogel (2005)
,
Kaitio & Mamoru (2016)
,
Lalronunga
et al
. (2020)
,
Liu
et al
. (2018)
,
Purkayastha & David (2019)
,
Smith (1943)
,
Zhou
et al.
(2019)
, and
Ziegler
et al
. (2019)
.