A revision of the genus Leptotyphlops in northeastern Africa and southwestern Arabia (Serpentes: Leptotyphlopidae)
Author
Published, First
text
Zootaxa
2007
2007-02-15
1408
1
78
journal article
86427
10.5281/zenodo.6789060
11bee6ab-227a-4dec-8d51-250b7067cc1b
11755334
6789060
Leptotyphlops macrorhynchus
(Jan & Sordelli)
(
Plate 9
, Fig. 1)
Sudan
beaked worm-snake
Stenostoma (Ramphostoma) macrorhynchum
Jan & Sordelli,
1860
in
1860–1866, Icon. Gen. Ophid. 1: livr. 1, Pls. 5 & 6, fig. 12. Type locality:
Sennar
,
Al Jazirah Province
,
Central Region
,
Sudan
(
13°32’N
,
33°37’E
,
elevation
350 m
),
holotype
destroyed by fire (formerly in MSNM).
Ramphostoma macrorhynchum
—
Jan, 1861: 190
,
1863: 16
,
1864: 39
.
Glauconia macrorhynchus
—
Boulenger, 1890: 92
,
1893: 61
,
1915c: 643
(part), 1920: 299 (part);
Werner, 1907: 42
,
1917: 201
(part).
Glauconia fiechteri
Scortecci, 1929
, Atti. Soc. Ital. Sci. Nat., Milano, 68: 266 (part), fig. (unnumbered). Type locality: Villabruzzi, Giohar,
Somalia
(
02°46’N
,
45°31’E
,
100 m
),
lectotype
, MSNM 582 (formerly MSNM 2032a), collected by U. Fiechter,
9 December 1928
;
Wallach & Lanza 2004: 85
.
Leptotyphlops cairi
—
Gans & Laurent, 1965: 49
.
Leptotyphlops macrorhynchus
—
Haas, 1959: 90
, figs. 1–2;
Villiers, 1975: 85
(part), figs. 107–108;
Kramer & Schnurrenberger, 1963: 477
, fig. 1;
Corkill & Cochrane, 1966: 496
;
Lanza, 1972: 174
;
Hahn, 1978: 482
;
Arnold, 1980: 314
,
1987: 253
;
Farag & Banaja, 1980: 13
;
Leviton & Aldrich, 1984
: xxiv;
Werner, 1982: 156
(part), 1987: 283 (part);
Gallagher & Arnold, 1988: 411
(Mintirib);
Leviton
et al.,
1992: 82
(part), pl. 13C;
Meirte, 1992: 15
, fig. 28;
Largen & Rasmussen, 1993: 324
;
Schleich
et al.,
1996: 475
(part), pl. 41, fig. 117;
Largen, 1997: 87
; Sahel, 1997: 132, pl. 76;
Schätti & Desvoignes, 1999: 78
;
Baha
el Din, 2006: 221
, figs. A–B [p. 223], pl. 82.
Leptotyphlops macrorhynchus macrorhynchus
—
Villiers, 1950: 56
(part), figs. 54–55, 1963: 86 (part), figs. 92–93;
Hahn, 1980: 20
;
Lanza, 1983: 220
,
1990: 431
;
Schleich
et al.,
1996: 477
(part);
Gasperetti, 1988: 200
, fig. 14.
Leptotyphlops longicaudus,
Hahn, 1980: 19
(part);
Lanza, 1983: 220
,
1990: 431
.
Diagnosis.
A member of the
Leptotyphlops longicaudus
group, differing from
L. longicaudus
in its strongly hooked snout and relatively shorter tail (total length/tail ratio 10.0–14.3 vs 5.7–11.0). It differs from
L. cairi
in being unpigmented, having a beak, and a longer, thinner body. Skull with a large frontoparietal foramen like
L. cairi
.
Description.
Body cylindrical, with head and neck slightly broadened, the moderate tail tapers to a small blunt terminal cone.
Snout hooked in lateral view with distinct beak, rostral moderate (0.36–0.60 head width, mean = 0.50), much wider than nasals dorsally, not reaching level of eyes. Behind rostral, upper lip bordered by infranasal (nostril midway between rostral and supralabial along nasal suture), small anterior supralabial with a width along lip equal to that of infranasal, large ocular with small eye or eyespot centrally placed in upper half, and moderate posterior supralabial. Frontal, supraoculars, and postfrontal subequal, forming a rather floral-like rosette pattern (as if cut from a single large median rounded shield). Supraoculars subpentagonal, anteriorly wedged between upper nasal and ocular, posteriorly wedged between frontal and postfrontal, both smaller than interparietal and interoccipital. Parietals transverse, larger than the occipitals (which are not fused, but usually fused elsewhere in the species range), in contact with the posterior supralabials. Temporal single. No mental, four infralabials.
Body covered with 14 rows of smooth, imbricate, subequal scales. Reduction to 10 rows takes place lateral to the subtriangular cloacal shield. Total middorsals 315–404; subcaudals 26–43.
Total length/diameter ratio 64–133; total length/tail ratio 10.0–15.7.
Dorsum unpigmented, pale reddish-brown or pink (in life) to beige or tan (in preservative), venter cream to white, but a specimen from Sodere,
Ethiopia
, has the subcaudals pigmented.
Size:
Largest specimen (
NMK
/O. 2661 —
Porr Hill
,
Turkana
,
Kenya
) 150 + 10 =
160 mm
.
Habitat.
Sandy areas of dry savanna and semi-desert. At least parapatric with
Leptotyphlops cairi
at the
type
locality and in the
lower Nile Valley
near
Cairo
,
Egypt
(
Baha el Din, 2006
)
.
Distribution.
Gambia
(
type
of
Glauconia natatrix
Andersson
fide
Wallach 2003
), east through the Sahel and Sudanese savanna to the Horn of Africa, north to
Turkey
, south to
Kenya
and northern
Tanzania
,
0–1250 m
(
Plate 5
). The status of populations in West Africa, the Middle East, and
Pakistan
and northwest
India
remains be investigated.
Localities.
SUDAN
. Daragaia, N. Kordofan NMW 15458; Gabl el Meghahir (
White Nile
) BMNH 1900.9.22.23; Kosti (
White Nile
) BMNH 1914.8.17.10; Sennar (
Jan, 1860
).
ETHIOPIA
. Sodere BH uncat.
KENYA
. No locality MVZ 200827; NMK/O. uncat.; NMZB 14881;
20 km
N of Kimana ZFMK 41670; Nariokotome River, west
Turkana
NMK/O. 3014; Olorgesaille NMK/O. 2729; Porr Hill, east
Turkana
NMK/O. 2661; Sankuri MNHG 1561.87;
Wajir
CAS 146971; NHCL 1548.
TANZANIA
. NE side of Mount Meru CAS 89734.
SOMALIA
.
10 km
S of Bedawarak MCZ 74163; Bosaso NHCL 1800–02; Southern Somalia NHCL 1542.