Taxonomy of the Threadsnakes of the tribe Epictini (Squamata: Serpentes: Leptotyphlopidae) in Colombia
Author
Pinto, Roberta Richard
Author
Passos, Paulo
Author
Portilla, José Rances Caicedo
Author
Arredondo, Juan Camilo
Author
Fernandes, Ronaldo
text
Zootaxa
2010
2724
1
28
journal article
46924
10.5281/zenodo.199951
9581ddd0-efed-4ff4-a955-4f6db2dad6c9
1175-5326
199951
Epictia signata
(
Jan 1861
)
Fig. 14
Stenostoma signatum
Jan 1861
, Archivio Per La Zoologia, L’Anatomia e La Fisiologia, Genova, 1:188.
Stenostoma
signatum—
Jan & Sordelli 1861
, Icnographie generale des Ophidiens, vol. I, livr. 2, fig. 3.
Glauconia
signata—
Boulenger 1893
, Catalogue of the Snakes in the British Museum, 1:64.
Leptotyphlops
amazonicus—
Hahn 1979
, Herpetologica 33:58.
Leptotyphlops
amazonicus—
Peters & Orejas-Miranda 1970
, Bulletin of the
United States
of National Museum, 297:173.
Leptotyphlops
amazonicus—
Hahn 1980
, Das Tierreich, 101:7.
Leptotyphlops
signatus—
Hahn 1980
, Das Tierreich, 101:26.
Leptotyphlops
signatus—
McDiarmid, Campbell & Touré 1999
, Snake Species of the World, 1:43.
Epictia
signata—
Hedges, Adalsteinsson & Branch
in
Adalsteisson
et al
. 2009, Zootaxa, 2244:1–50.
Holotype
.
MNHN
3235 from “patrie inconnue” (= unknown country).
Diagnosis.
Epictia signata
is distinguished from all congeners by the following combination of characters: snout truncate in dorsal and ventral views, rounded in lateral view; supraocular present, not in contact with first supralabial; rostral scale triangular in dorsal view; ocular subhexagonal with straight shape at the eye level; supraocular longer than frontal scale; temporal indistinct; fused caudals absent; eyes concentrated in the middle area of the expanded upper part of ocular; two supralabials (1+1); four infralabials; 208–282 middorsal scales; 261–214 midventral scales; 14–17 subcaudal scales; 10 scales around the middle of tail; seven dorsal scale rows uniformly brown, and seven lateroventral series light brown; rostral, last subcaudals, and terminal spine white coloured.
Distribution.
The single specimen found along collections examination has no specific data other than “
Colombia
”.
Remarks.
Stenostoma signatum
was described by
Jan (1861)
through a specimen of unknown provenance. Later the
holotype
was illustrated by
Jan and Sordelli (1861)
.
Hahn (1979)
, based on the data from
Jan (1861)
, pointed out that this specimen was purchased by the Muséum National d’histoire Naturalle of Paris in 1858 and originally labelled as “
Madagascar
?”. Because there are no Leptotyphlopid record’s to
Madagascar
,
Hahn (1979)
argued that the label was in error.
Leptotyphlops amazonicus
was described by
Orejas-Miranda (1969)
based on five specimens from southeastern
Venezuela
and one without specific provenance, possibly from Amazon Rainforest of
Ecuador
.
Orejas-Miranda (1969)
cited that the
paratype
(ANSP 3290) from Ecuadorian Amazon was from the Orton collection. However
Cope (1876
;
1877
) did not mention any specimen of
Leptotyphlops
from
Ecuador
and
Peru
collected by the Orton expedition. The Orton expedition was divided in two parts, one ascending the Orinoco River and the other one through the Amazon basin. Thus, it seems that this specimen was collected by the first part while in
Venezuela
and not by the second in the Amazon (
Cisneros-Heredia 2008
).
Hahn (1979)
examined the supposed
holotype
of
Stenostoma signatum
(MNHN 3235), comparing it with the
type
series of
Leptotyphlops amazonicus
. According to
Hahn (1979)
, the
holotype
of
S. signatum
is comparable with the
L. amazonicus
type
series in all meristic and morphometic characters and, therefore, he relegated
L. amazonicus
to the synonymy of the first, restricting the
type
locality to northern region of Amazonia.
Despite few known specimens and uncertain distribution there are characteristics figured by
Jan and Sordelli (1861)
and
Hahn (1979)
that apparently diagnose
E. signata
from sympatric congeners (e.g., uniformly brown dorsum except for snout and last subcaudal scale white pigmented combined with higher number of middorsal scales and elongate first supralabial). On the basis of such characteristics we identified the specimen IBSP 7204 as
E. signata
, which is first specimen recorded from
Colombia
and the eighth known of the species.