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 nursii
(Anderson
in
Boulenger) (
Plate 7
, Fig. 1)
Nurse's Worm Snake
Glauconia nursii
Anderson
in
Boulenger, 1896
, Cat. Snakes Brit. Mus. 3: 591.
Type
locality:
Aden
[=
Yemen
] (
12°46’N
,
45°01’E
, near sea level),
lectotype
BMNH 1946.1
.16.91 (formerly
BMNH
1895.11.27.1
), collected by
C.G. Nurse
;
Anderson, 1896: 64
.
Glauconia cairi
—
Werner, 1907: 42
(part, Durri).
Leptotyphlops nursii
—
Parker, 1938: 488
;
Corkill & Cochrane, 1966: 496
;
Hahn, 1980: 23
(part);
Gasperetti, 1988: 201
(part);
McDiarmid
et al.,
1999: 39
;
Baha
el Din, 2006: 223
, figs. A–B [p. 225].
Leptotyphlops nursi
—
Schmidt & Hoogstraal, 1951: 6
;
Schmidt, 1953: 259
;
Spanò, 1972: 131
;
Farag & Banaja, 1980: 13
;
Wranik, 1993: 10
, fig (unnumbered);
Abadi, 1998: 101
.
Leptotyphlops cairi
—
Schmidt & Marx, 1957: 23
;
Marx, 1968: 28
;
Saleh, 1997: 131
(part).
Leptotyphlops macrorhynchus
—
Corkill & Cochrane, 1966: 496
.
Leptotyphlops macrorhynchus macrorhynchus
—
Hahn, 1978: 483
(part);
Gasperetti, 1988: 200
(part).
Leptotyphlops blanfordi nursi
—
Hahn, 1978: 486
(part), fig. 8.
Leptotyphlops blanfordi nursii
—
Leviton & Aldrich, 1984
: xxiv;
Arnold, 1987: 252
.
Leptotyphlops blanfordii nursii
—
Schätti & Gasperetti, 1994: 382
;
Schätti & Desvoignes, 1999: 78
.
Diagnosis.
A member of the
Leptotyphlops longicaudus
species group, resembling
L. blanfordii
in having 12 scale rows on the tail, but differing in its skull, with two supraoccipitals and a large frontoparietal foramen. The snout is rounded in lateral profile.
Leptotyphlops nursii
differs from
L. burii
(with which it is sympatric at
ad-Dali
) in having only 281–378 middorsal scales and much smaller rostral and frontal shields.
Description.
Body cylindrical, with head broader than neck and flattened, the short tail tapers slightly before a small terminal spine.
Snout rounded, rostral broad (0.46–0.55 head width, mean = 0.49), distinctly wider than nasals anteriorly and extending to a point nearly level with the front of the eyes, a distinct preoral groove is present ventrally with a slight ventral extension of rostral below lip level. Behind rostral, upper lip bordered by infranasal (nostril nearer to supralabial than rostral along nasal suture), small anterior supralabial with a width along lip twice than of infranasal, large ocular with centrally placed eye, and large posterior supralabial. Supraoculars pentagonal, subequal to frontal, anteriorly wedged between supranasal and ocular, posteriorly wedged between frontal and postfrontal, which are hexagonal and subequal, but slightly smaller than the interparietal and interoccipital. Parietals transverse, in contact with the posterior supralabial. Occipitals variable, enlarged and fused in the
types
and half of sample but not fused in other half. Temporal single. No mental, four infralabials.
Body covered with 14 rows of smooth, imbricate, subequal scales. Reduction to 12 rows on tail takes place lateral to the subtriangular cloacal shield. Middorsals 281–378; subcaudals 34–48.
Total length/diameter ratio 48–105; total length/tail ratio 7.2–16.8.
Dorsum usually pale brown, venter creamy-white.
Size.
Largest specimen (
BMNH 1946.1
.16.91 —
Aden
,
lectotype
) 218 + 24 =
242 mm
.
Distribution.
Long known from southwestern Arabia, this species is now recorded from the highlands of northern
Somalia
,
50–1525 m
(Fig. 7).
Localities.
SOMALIA
.
Ethiopian
border at
10°10'N
,
42°50'E
,
1525 m
,
BMNH
1949.2.3.48;
10°33'N
,
48°58'E
,
915 m
,
MZUF 4473
;
Wagga
,
Golis Mts
.
BMNH 1905.11
.7.40.
SAUDI ARABIA
.
Najran
BMNH 1938.2
.1.69.
YEMEN
.
ad-Dali
BMNH
1907.3.7.1; ad-Darb (
Schätti & Desvoignes, 1999
);
Aden
BMNH 1934.12
.
4.1, 1946.1.16.92 (
paralectotypes
), 1946.1.16.91 (
lectotype
);
MNHN 1962.933
;
Ghayl
ba
Wazir
BMNH 1962.934
;
60 km
N of
Sa’da
ZFMK 453591
; Suq Sharas (
Schätti & Gasperetti, 1994
);
Ta’izz
FMNH 66156–60
[66158*];
Wadi Tuban
ZFMK 43589
;
Wadi Warazan
&
Wadi Zabid
(
Schätti & Gasperetti, 1994
)
.