New Taxa And Cryptic Species Of Neotropical Snakes (Xenodontinae), With Commentary On Hemipenes As Generic And Specific Characters
Author
Myers, Charles W.
Author
McDowell, Samuel B.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2014
2014-03-06
2014
385
1
112
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/862.1
journal article
10.1206/862.1
0003-0090
5378473
Eutrachelophiini
,
new tribe
TYPE
GENUS:
Eutrachelophis
,
new genus
.
CONTENT: One genus with three species from western and middle Amazonia (map 1).
DEFINITION AND DIAGNOSIS: Distinguished from all other snakes by the generic definition below. Tribal status is conferred primarily to express hypothesized relationship with the
Xenodontini
, which are defined mainly by the presence of hemipenial apical discs (lost in a few species as demonstrated herein). The
Eutrachelophiini
and
Xenodontini
have hemipenes (divided except in one species) with noncapitate capitula ornamented solely with spines and spinules and with the apices either nude or spiny; the sulcus spermaticus is divided proximally, with branches centrifugal or becoming so. Most ‘‘xenodontine’’ genera are characterized by hemipenes that are distally calyculate or flounced, frequently with some form of capitation. Few other genera of ‘‘xenodontines’’ are characterized by acalyculate spiny hemipenes.
REMARKS: The new tribe
Eutrachelophiini
is assigned to the
Xenodontinae
primarily on the basis of hemipenial comparisons with a cluster of genera (tribe
Xenodontini
) that includes
Liophis
and the
type
genus
Xenodon
. Relationships among the various genera remain to be clarified.