Synonymised And Forgotten, The Bird’S Head Stout-Tailed Snakes, Calamophis Meyer (Squamata: Serpentes: Homalopsidae)
Author
Murphy, John C.
text
Raffles Bulletin of Zoology
2012
2012-08-31
60
2
515
523
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5350200
2345-7600
5350200
Calamophis
Meyer
Calamophis
Meyer, 1874: 135
Brachyorrhos
: Peters & Doria, 1878: 371
Brachyorrhos
:
Boulenger, 1893: 305
Type
species
.
—
Calamophis jobiensis
Meyer, 1874
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis
.
—
Calamophis
is distinguished from
Brachyorrhos
by the following morphological traits: rostral broader than tall (as tall as broad in
Brachyorrhos
), nasal scale undivided (divided and bilobed in
Brachyorrhos
); internasal single (divided in
Brachyorrhos
); postocular single (two in
Brachyorrhos
); dorsal scales imbricate in 19 rows that are reduced to 17 anterior to the vent (not reduced in
Brachyorrhos
); base of tail slightly constricted in two of these species; tail is thick and tapers slowly to an almost blunt tip (stout); males have tubercles on scales in the first 4 rows just anterior and posterior to the vent. Dorsal scales in the vertebral row dorsal to the vent tend to be enlarged from the fusion of dorsal scales, these may number three to seven scales.
Brachyorrhos
may have fused scales on the dorsal surface of the tail, but are absent immediately over the vent.
Distribution
.
—
Calamophis
appears to be restricted to Yapen Island and the Bird’s Head Region of West Papua. It is known from: Andai (a coastal wetland about
35 m
ASL); the Arfak (Mt. Arfak) Mountains, elevation unknown, but the range has peaks that exceed
2500 m
; and the Tamrau Mountains (Kebar Valley at about
550 m
ASL and Ambuaki ~
800 m
ASL). Both the Arfak and Tamrau Mountains are part of the Vogelkop
Highlands
, an area of rugged topography and a biodiversity hot spot. Yapen Island is about
250 km
from Andai, and none of the Bird’s Head localities are more than
100 km
apart (
Fig. 4
). The
Papua New Guinea
locality for
B. jobiensis
in Iskandar and Colijn (2001) is based on
Mainophis robusta
, which is a synonym of the elapid
Furina tristis
(Shea & Sadlier, 1999)
and should not be included in synonymies of
Calamophis
or
Brachyorrhos
.
Etymology
.
— It is unclear if Meyer named this snake using the Latin root
calamitas
(calamity, misfortune, disaster) or
calamus
(anything made of a reed, such as a pen or arrow). The latter seems more probable given the striped pattern of the
type
species.
Content
.
— 4 species