A new species of tree snake (Dipsadoboa, Serpentes: Colubridae) from ‘ sky island’ forests in northern Mozambique, with notes on other members of the Dipsadoboa werneri group
Author
Branch, William R.
Author
Bayliss, Julian
Author
Bittencourt-Silva, Gabriela B.
Author
Conradie, Werner
Author
Engelbrecht, Hanlie M.
Author
Loader, Simon P.
Author
Menegon, Michele
Author
Nanvonamuquitxo, Cristóvão
Author
Tolley, Krystal A.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-07-25
4646
3
541
563
journal article
25430
10.11646/zootaxa.4646.3.6
d603a743-e7ee-4bd2-a084-f77a19713ae3
1175-5326
3351108
AE4B0255-50CB-41E6-93B5-B42DC67C9E3F
Dipsadoboa montisilva
Branch, Conradie & Tolley
sp. nov.
Montane Forest Tree Snake
(
Fig. 3
,
4
,
5
)
http://zoobank.org/
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
ACAF8954-A17F-4830-9B1A-84F8E08BE5AC
Synonymy:
Dipsadoboa
sp. (
Timberlake
et al.
2012
;
Bayliss
et al.
2014
)
Dipsadoboa
cf.
shrevei
(
Conradie
et al
. 2016
)
.
Type Material:
Holotype
:
PEM
R21122, adult male with everted hemipenes, preserved in formalin and transferred to 70% ethanol.
Body
coiled and with a small incision ventrally. Collected
21 November 2014
by
K.A. Tolley
,
S.P. Loader
,
W. Conradie
,
G.B. Bittencourt-Silva
,
M. Menegon
,
H.M. Engelbrecht
, and
C. Nanvonamuquitxo.
Type locality:
Mt Mabu Forest Base Camp (
16°17’10.4”S
,
36°24’00.2”E
,
919 m
above sea level ~a.s.l.),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
.
Paratypes
:
Five
specimens:
PEM
R21115
,
male,
Mt Mabu Forest
Summit Camp (
16°17’48.5”S
,
36°23’32.7”E
,
1644 m
a.s.l.
),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
, collected
20 November 2014
by
KAT
,
SPL
,
WC
,
GBBS
,
MM
,
HME
,
CN
;
PEM
R21123
,
male,
Mt Mabu Forest
Base Camp (
16°17’10.4”S
,
36°24’00.2”E
,
919 m
a.s.l.
),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
, collected
20 November 2014
, by
KAT
,
SPL
,
WC
,
GBBS
,
MM
,
HME
,
CN
;
NHMUK 2018.02398
(previously
PEM
R21116)
,
male,
Mt Mabu Forest
Summit Camp (
16°17’48.5”S
,
36°23’32.7”E
,
1644 m
a.s.l),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
, collected
20 November 2014
by
KAT
,
SPL
,
WC
,
GBBS
,
MM
,
HME
,
CN
;
MHNM
.
Rep.
2014.0011, male,
Mt Mabu Forest
Base Camp (
16°17’10.4”S
,
36°24’00.2”E
,
919 m
a.s.l.
),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
, collected
20 November 2014
by
KAT
,
SPL
,
WC
,
GBBS
,
MM
,
HME
,
CN
;
PEM
R21937
,
female,
Mt Mabu Forest
Base Camp (
16°17’10”S
,
36°24’04”E
, ~
950 m
a.s.l.
),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
, collected on
15 October 2012
by JB
.
Additional Material:
One specimen,
PEM
R21195,
juvenile female, M’pàluwé
Ridge Forest
,
Ribáuè Massif
(
14°54’10.0”S
,
38°18’04”E
,
1416 m
a.s.l.
)
Nampula Province
,
Mozambique
, collected
1 December 2014
by
KAT
,
WC
,
GBBS
,
MM
and
HME
.
Etymology.
The name is derived from the Latin words ‘
montem
’ = mountain and ‘
silva
’= forest, which is in reference to the isolated mountain forest habitat in which it is found on Mt Mabu,
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
. The name is in the masculine form.
Diagnosis.
Dipsadoboa montisilva
sp. nov.
is distinguished from all other members of the genus by having divided subcaudals (single in the
D. unicolor
group), an entire anal (divided in the
D. aulica
group), and 19 MSR (17 MSR in
D. duchesnii
group). It differs from other members of the
D. werneri
group in having low ventral and subcaudal counts (higher in
D. werneri
,
see
Table 4
), and usually only two supralabials (4–5) entering the eye (three supralabials (3–5) in others)), 1+1 or 1+2 temporals (1+
1 in
D. s.
shrevei
and
D. s. kageleri
), and an entire anal and 19 MSR (divided anal and 17 MSR in
D. s. kageleri
).
Description.
(
Paratype
and additional material variation in parentheses). Body elongated, slightly laterally compressed, tapering gradually to a relatively long tail. Dorsal scales smooth with single or double apical pits and in 19-19-15 scale rows; 203 ventrals (195–
210 males
, 194–
201 females
); anal entire; 98 subcaudals (
95–100 in
males,
89–90 in
females). Head depressed and broad and distinct from the neck; snout bluntly rounded and about half as long again as horizontal diameter of orbit (1.53x OD, 1.31–1.87x in
paratypes
); rostral just visible from above, much broader than deep; internasals rectangular and broader than long, but shorter than rectangular prefrontals, which are in broad contact laterally with loreal; frontal pentangular, slightly longer than broad, in broad contact with large supraocular, and posteriorly inserting slightly between the very large parietals; very large nasal shield divided, region posterior to nostril deeply excavated with the characteristic
Dipsadoboa
nasal depression, below contacting 1
st
and 2
nd
supralabials; loreal deeper than long, in contact with nasal, 2
nd
supralabial and prefrontal, but excluded from orbit by the single preocular, which is well-separated from the frontal. Eye large, vertical diameter half as deep again as distance from lip, and with a vertical pupil; two postoculars, the lower slight larger than upper and in contact with 5
th
and 6
th
subralabials; temporals 1+1 on right, 1+2 on left (four with 1+2, three with 1+1); supralabials eight, 4
th
and 5
th
entering orbit (3–5
th
entering orbit in
PEM
R21115, and nine supralabials, 4–6
th
entering orbit in
NHMUK
2018.02398), and 6–7
th
supralabials largest; infralabials 10, first
5 in
contact with anterior chin shields (first 5 on right, and first 6 on left in
NHMUK
2018.02398); anterior chin shields slight longer than posterior chin shields. Further details and meristics for the type series are summarized in
Table 3
.
Colouration.
Typical with minor differences for all adults (>
600 mm
total length,
Fig. 3A
). Ground colour on dorsum olive-brown, lighter on two lateral scale rows, and becoming bright brown on dorsum of tail; ventrum bright orange throughout, becoming paler beneath the tail to become light olive at the tip. Ventral orange colour extends onto all supralabials (only proximal onto supralabials in two adults, where supralabials 1–4 are cream to light orange). Throat white on preventrals and adjacent gulars and extending onto most proximal infralabials, but becoming infused with orange on chin shields and adjacent infralabials. Eye white both heavily reticulated in red-brown giving a reddish tinge. Extended tongue tri-coloured, with white tines merging to a dark grey distal half and pink base.
In juveniles (<
400 mm
total length) the whole body and tail dorsally is uniform light orange-brown with a paler ventral surface, with the only different coloration being a slight flush of orange on the proximal supralabials in juveniles approaching
500 mm
total length (e.g.
PEM
R21195,
Fig. 3E
).
FIGURE 3.
Dipsadoboa montisilva
sp. nov.
Holotype, adult male, PEM R21122, Mt Mabu Forest Base Camp, Zambezia Province, Mozambique. A: whole body in life, showing uniform olive-brown dorsal coloration and showing the weakly-keeled orange ventrals, whose coloration suffuses onto the three adjacent lateral body scale rows. Head views of holotype (after preservation). B: right side of head showing ventral coloration extending onto upper labials, and two upper labials (4–5) entering orbit. C: dorsal surface of head. D: ventral surface of head showing paired anterior chin shields. E: juvenile female, PEM R21195, M’pàluwé Ridge Forest, Ribáuè Massif, Nampula Province, Mozambique, showing uniform light brown coloration, slightly paler ventrum, long tail and weakly-keeled ventrals.
After preservation the orange ventral colouration was lost becoming dirty ivory in colour, and the dorsum became grey-green (
Fig. 3
B–D).
Hemipenis.
Both hemipenes of the
holotype
are fully everted as the retractor muscle was cut through a small lateral incision in the subcaudals. Due to leakage of fixative, the organ became slightly deflated but all details of ornamentation are visible (
Fig. 4
). The hemipenis is typical for the Boigini, being a simple organ with an undivided sulcus, basal spines and calyculate distal ornamentation (
Bogert 1940
;
Rasmussen 1986
). The base is unadorned and the simple sulcus has marginally raised lips and turns initially to the posterior surface of the organ (left in
Fig. 4
) and then along the length of the organ to drain into the ornamented cap. The middle of the organ includes rows of basal spines with slightly hooked, ossified tips that reduce in size distally. As with other
Dipsadoboa
hemipenes (
Rasmussen 1993
) the rows of spines are asymmetrical, with two rows of 4–5 spines lying medial to the sulcus and only one row of smaller spines lateral to the sulcus. In addition, the two largest spines lie at the bottom of the outer medial row and border a zone of small scattered spines on the asulcal surface. The final distal third of the organ is an ornamented cap with numerous calyces with raised, papillate edges.
FIGURE 4.
Right everted hemipenis of
Dipsadoboa montisilva
sp. nov.
, holotype (PEM R21122) viewed from the asulcal surface. Note the zonal distribution of ornamentation with basal spines and calyculate cap, and the two largest basal spines (bottom right of image) that border the asucal nude zone.
Size.
Largest female (
PEM
R21137) 597 + 185 =
782 mm
; largest male (
holotype
,
PEM
R21122) 825 + 259 =
1084 mm
. The small series includes only one adult female and thus precludes determination of possible sexual size dimorphism. In both
D. werneri
and
D. s.
shrevei
,
where larger series are available males are longer than females (
Rasmussen 1986
;
Haagner
et al.
2000
).
Distribution.
Known only from the evergreen Afrotemperate forest patches on Mt Mabu and Mt Ribáuè (M’pàluwé Forest),
Zambezia Province
,
Mozambique
from altitudes between 919 and
1644 m
a.s.l. (
Fig. 5A
). There is comparatively lower genetic divergence between individuals from these montane isolates than between other species in the genus. This suggests that the species may be more widely distributed in association with evergreen forest patches in northern
Mozambique
. For example, it could also occur in the Afromontane forest on neighbouring Mt Namuli, as a single specimen of
Atheris mabuensis
(
Branch & Bayliss 2009
)
was also found at this site following its discovery at Mt Mabu. The lack of specimens (including any
Atheris
sp.) from the well-surveyed Mt
Mulanje
in adjacent southern
Malawi
(
Stevens 1974
;
Broadley 2001
;
Branch & Cunningham 2006
) suggests that it is absent from that massif.
Spawls
et al.
(2018)
plot a record of
D. s.
shrevei
from the Rondo Plateau in southeastern
Tanzania
, but the affinities of this specimen with other members of the
D. werneri
group should be reassessed (see below).
Habitat.
All Mt Mabu specimens collected were either active on the forest floor or in low branches (
Fig. 5B
), while the Mt Ribáuè specimen was collected from low branches (ca.
1.5 m
high) of a small tree in the understory.
Dipsadoboa montisilva
sp. nov.
inhabits evergreen montane forest in contrast to the related
D. shrevei
, which inhabits miombo woodland and gallery forest (
Broadley
et al.
2003
). All specimens were collected between
919–1644 m
a.s.l. on Mt Mabu and at
1416 m
a.s.l. at Mt Ribáuè (M’pàluwé Forest). It is possible that the species occurs higher in the canopy but was not visible, so the collections in the lower branches should not be considered as the limits of this species habitat. The habitat on Mt Mabu comprises closed-canopy forest, except for small gaps caused by tree-falls and along stream gullies. Tall trees (up to
40–50 m
height) emerge from the canopy, with
Strombosia scheffleri
dominant and others including
Newtonia
sp.,
Chrysophyllum gorungosanum
,
Maranthes goetzeniana
,
Ficus thonningii
,
Blighia unijugata
and
Funtumia africana
. Smaller trees in the understorey include
Allophylus
sp.,
Canthium
sp.,
Oxyanthus speciosus
,
Rawsonia lucida
,
Tabernaemontana ventricosa
,
Vepris stolzii
and small saplings of
Cola greenwayi
,
Drypetes
sp. and
Maranthes
sp. Canopy lianas are dominated by
Millettia lasiantha
(Dowsett-Lemaire & Dowsett, unpubl. report 2008;
Timberlake
et al
. 2012
).
FIGURE 5.
Type locality of
Dipsadoboa montisilva
sp. nov.
, Mt Mabu Forest Base Camp, Zambezia Province, Mozambique. A: general view of the evergreen mid-altitude wet forest close to the base camp. B: low trees and riverine bushes beside stream at base camp.
Biology.
There is no direct knowledge about the species’ biology however, all
Dipsadoboa
species are currently considered nocturnal and arboreal. Chameleons have been recorded in the diet of all other members of the
D. werneri
group (
Rasmussen 1986
;
Haagner
et al.
2000
), and are plentiful in the forests of Mt Mabu (
Branch & Tolley 2010
;
Branch
et al.
2014
) and Mt Ribáuè (
Conradie
et al.
2016
). In contrast, frogs form the dominant diet of the
D. aulica
group (Stevens 1964;
Broadley & Stevens 1971
;
Rasmussen 1989a
).
Conservation.
The species is currently known from two small mid-altitude evergreen forests on Mt Mabu (
79 km
2
) and Mt Ribáuè (M’pàluwé Forest ~
1.9 km
2
). It has not yet been recorded from the larger forest patch (~
4.3 km
2
) on the western Mt Ribáuè massif. None of the forest on either mountain is currently formally protected, although Mt Mabu is under the stewardship of the Mt Mabu Conservation Project, aiming to manage nature-based tourism activities in the future (
Bayliss
et al.
2014
). While the forest at Mt Mabu is essentially intact, the two endemic chameleons (
Nadzikambia baylissi
and
Rhampholeon maspictus
) are considered Near Threatened because human encroachment and fires for agriculture are threatening the ecological integrity of the forest (
Tolley & Bayliss 2014
; Tolley
et al.
2014). The situation might be similar for
D. montisilva
sp. nov.
as well as other endemic species such as
Atheris mabuensis
(
Branch & Bayliss 2009
)
. In stark contrast, Mt Ribáuè is heavily threatened by ongoing habitat destruction in association with subsistence agriculture, particularly at the M’pàluwé Forest section on the eastern massif, which has already been reduced to less than
2 km
2
and is heavily fragmented and degraded.
Dipsadoboa montisilva
sp. nov.
was found in the small degraded Mt M’pàluwé section, but it is very likely to also occur in the larger forest patch of Mt Ribáuè.