A new snake of the genus Dendrelaphis Boulenger, 1890 (Squamata: Colubridae) from the coastal area of southern Vietnam
Author
Nguyen, Sang Ngoc
Institute of Tropical Biology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 85 Tran Quoc Toan St., Dist. 3, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam & Graduate University of Science and Technology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 18 Hoang Quoc Viet Road, Hanoi, Vietnam
Author
Nguyen, Vu Dang Hoang
Institute of Tropical Biology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 85 Tran Quoc Toan St., Dist. 3, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Author
Le, Manh Van
Institute of Tropical Biology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 85 Tran Quoc Toan St., Dist. 3, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Author
Nguyen, Luan Thanh
0000-0002-4663-125X
Indo-Myanmar Conservation, No. 1806, C 14 Bac Ha Building, To Huu St., Tu Liem Dist., Hanoi, Vietnam nguyenluanbio @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4663 - 125 X
nguyenluanbio@gmail.com
Author
Vo, Thi-Dieu-Hien
Faculty of Environmental and Food Engineering, Nguyen Tat Thanh University, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Author
Vo, Ba Dinh
Department of Biology, University of Science, Hue University, 77 Nguyen Hue St., Hue City, Vietnam
Author
Che, Jing
Laboratory of Herpetological Diversity and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, CAS, China
Author
Murphy, Robert W.
Reptilia Zoo and Education Centre, 2501 Rutherford Rd Vaughan, ON, Canada L 4 K 2 N 6
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-07-18
5318
1
130
144
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5318.1.6
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5318.1.6
1175-5326
8158335
64A7A20D-8589-439C-9AF5-AD4B0A934271
Dendrelaphis binhi
sp. nov.
Holotype
.
ITBCZ 6663
, adult male, collected from
Tuy Phong
,
Binh Thuan Province
,
Vietnam
; coordinates
11
o
12’36.2”N
,
108
o
41’43.2”E
;
elevation
34 m
a.s.l.
by
S.N. Nguyen
and L.
T
.
Nguyen
, on
23 July 2018
(
Figs. 3
&
4
).
Paratypes
.
Seven
specimens:
ITBCZ 6664
,
ITBCZ 6666
(adult females),
ITBCZ 6665
(subadult male), collected by the same collectors, on the same date and site as the holotype;
ITBCZ 6681
(adult male), collected from
Tuy Phong
,
Binh Thuan Province
,
Vietnam
, coordinates
11
o
13’03.3”N
,
108
o
39’10.2”E
,
elevation
39 m
a.s.l.
by
S.N. Nguyen
and L.
T
.
Nguyen
, on
26 July 2018
;
ITBCZ 5944-6
(adult females), collected from
Thuan Nam
,
Ninh Thuan Province
,
Vietnam
; coordinates
11
o
19’18.4”N
,
108
o
56’46.6”E
;
elevation
105 m
a.s.l.
by
S.N. Nguyen
and
D.H.
V
.
Nguyen
, on
13 April 2017
(
Figs. 3–5
)
.
Diagnosis.
Dendrelaphis binhi
sp. nov.
is distinguished from all of its congeners by a combination of the following morphological characters: medium sized bronzeback snake (largest TL
936 mm
in female); one long supralabial entering orbit; body scale smooth, 13 rows on neck and midbody, 9–11 before vent; vertebral scale row slightly enlarged; ventrals
154–158 in
males and
161–170 in
females; subcaudals 105 or
106 in
males and
95–102 in
females; 18 or 19 maxillary teeth, posterior teeth shorter than the others; hemipenis spinose, reaching 10
th
or 11
th
SC, with a tiny papilla; cloacal plate divided; dorsum bright brown with a white stripe along the lower flank.
Description of
holotype
. Adult male; head elongate (HL/HW = 1.99), distinct from neck; body elongate, SVL
495 mm
; tail long (TaL/TL = 0.305),
217 mm
in length; eye quite large with round pupil, eye diameter shorter than snout length (ED/SnL: 0.76) (
Table 3
).
Head scalation
. Dorsal head scales smooth, abutting along midline rather than overlapping; rostral broader than high, visible from above, touching nasals, internasals and 1
st
supralabial on both sides; supralabials 8/8, first fours small, the 5
th
bordering eye on both sides, the 6
th
small and triangle shaped, the 7
th
and 8
th
distinct larger than the 6
th
and the first fours; 1/1 loreal, much longer than high (2.0 mm length vs.
0.8 mm
height), touching nasal, internasal, prefrontal, preocular and the 2
nd
and 3
rd
supralabials; 1/1 preocular; 2/2 postoculars; 2+2/2+2 temporals; suture between internasals as long as that between prefrontals; frontal bell-shaped, widened anteriorly and much narrowed posteriorly (
5.6 mm
length,
3.6 mm
width); parietals longer than frontal (
6.5 mm
vs.
5.6 mm
length), bordered laterally by upper temporals and postocular and anteriorly by frontal and supraoculars; 10/10 infralabials, first pair medially in contact with each other, first five in contact with anterior chin shield, the 6
th
largest and touching posterior chin shield; posterior chin shields slightly longer than anterior ones (
5.1 mm
vs.
4.9 mm
) (
Fig. 4A
).
Body scalation.
Dorsal scales smooth, in 13-13-9 rows; lateral scales, except for the outer row, disposed obliquely; vertebral scale row slightly enlarged, narrower than the outer row of scales; scale row reductions from 13 to 11 at ventrals 89 and 90 and from 11 to 9 at ventrals 96 and 99; ventrals 158, with a suture-like lateral keel; cloacal plate divided; subcaudals 106, all paired; terminal caudal scale forming a pointed cap.
FIGURE 3.
Dendrelaphis binhi
sp. nov.
A–D, holotype ITBCZ 6663. A, specimen at its sleeping position in situ; B, dorsal view; C&D, dorsal and ventral views of fresh specimen; E, patatype ITBCZ 5945 and F, unvoucher specimen at their sleeping positions in situ, respectively.
Dentition.
Maxillary teeth 18, continuously, the posterior teeth slightly smaller than the others.
Hemipenis.
Hemipenis unforked, reaching 11
th
SC, spinose throughout, except for the apical naked area. The spines in the terminal half of the organ are largest. Sulcus spermaticus single, extending to tip, the sulcus lip prominent. On the apical naked area, there is a tiny lobule with small spines (
Fig. 4B&C
).
Coloration
. In life, dorsal and lateral parts of the body and tail bronze-brown, laterally this color extends to the upper half of the second scale row; upper part of head olive, lip and lower parts of the head and neck yellow; iris orange on the upper part and black on anterior, posterior, and lower parts of the eye; concealed parts of lateral scales light blue; a black temporal streak extending from eye to neck; a bright vertebral stripe on the anterior part of dorsum; two lateral stripes: a white one on the lower half of the second scale row and the upper half of the outer row and the second stripe is pale brown occurring on the lower half of the outer row and the edge of ventral scale; anterior part of the body with a series of black blotches at the suture between the lateral edge of ventral and the outer row, these blotches are less distinct or absent on the middle and posterior parts of the body; ventral white. In preservation, color faded but the pattern remained, all yellow parts becoming white.
TABLE 3.
Measurements (in mm) and scalation of the type series of
Dendrelaphis binhi
sp. nov.
See material and methods for abbreviations. M = male, F = female, SM = subadult male.
Voucher |
ITBCZ 6663 Holotype |
ITBCZ 6664 Paratype |
ITBCZ 6665 Paratype |
ITBCZ 6666 Paratype |
ITBCZ 6681 Paratype |
ITBCZ 5944 Paratype |
ITBCZ 5945 Paratype |
ITBCZ 5946 Paratype |
Sex |
M |
F |
SM |
F |
M |
F |
F |
F |
SVL |
495 |
652 |
442 |
570 |
494 |
677 |
636 |
570 |
TaL |
217 |
266 |
192 |
229 |
221 |
259 |
269 |
233 |
TL |
712 |
918 |
634 |
799 |
715 |
936 |
905 |
803 |
TaL/TL |
0.305 |
0.290 |
0.303 |
0.287 |
0.309 |
0.277 |
0.297 |
0.290 |
HL |
20.1 |
24.1 |
17.9 |
22.2 |
20.3 |
25.0 |
25.3 |
22.7 |
HW |
10.1 |
12.5 |
9.4 |
11.6 |
9.0 |
13.4 |
12.5 |
11.5 |
HH |
7.8 |
9.8 |
7.0 |
8.7 |
7.8 |
10.4 |
9.2 |
9.1 |
ED |
4.3 |
4.4 |
3.5 |
4.0 |
4.5 |
4.7 |
4.7 |
4.4 |
SnL |
5.4 |
7.2 |
5.6 |
6.7 |
5.9 |
7.2 |
7.8 |
6.3 |
EN |
4.1 |
4.7 |
3.1 |
4.8 |
4.5 |
5.5 |
5.4 |
4.8 |
ASR |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
MSR |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
13 |
PSR |
9 |
9 |
9 |
9 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
11 |
V+preV |
158+2 |
161+1 |
154+2 |
170+1 |
156+3 |
168+2 |
162+2 |
161+1 |
1st Red |
89 |
97 |
93 |
100 |
90 |
100 |
100 |
91 |
SC |
106 |
96 |
102 |
102 |
105 |
98 |
99 |
95 |
SL |
8/8 |
8/8 |
8/7 |
8/8 |
8/8 |
8/8 |
8/9 |
8/8 |
SL-Eye |
5/5 |
5/5 |
5/4 |
5/5 |
5/5 |
5/5 |
5/6 |
5/5 |
InL |
10/10 |
10/10 |
10/10 |
10/10 |
9/10 |
10/10 |
10/10 |
10/10 |
PrO |
1/1 |
1/1 |
1/1 |
1/1 |
1/1 |
1/1 |
1/1 |
1/1 |
PO |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/3 |
2/2 |
ATP |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
PTP |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
2/2 |
MT |
18 |
18 |
18 |
18 |
18 |
18 |
19 |
18 |
LHSC |
11th |
- |
10 |
- |
11 |
- |
- |
- |
Lor |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Variation.
Paratypes
ITBCZ 6665
and
ITBCZ 5945
have 7 and 9 supralabials on the right side, respectively;
paratypes
ITBCZ 5945
and
ITBCZ 5946
have 11 dorsal scale rows before vent;
paratype
ITBCZ 5946
has a short suture on the lower margin of the 5
th
supralabial on both sides;
paratype
ITBCZ 5945
has the upper half of the second dorsal row black forming a black longitudinal line (
Fig. 3E
); lip and lower parts of head and neck yellow in all specimens collected in
July in Tuy Phong
,
Binh Thuan Province
but white in all snakes collected in
April in Thuan Nam
,
Ninh Thuan Province
.
Table 3
summarizes variation in size and scalation of type series.
Sexual dimorphism.
Male has fewer ventral scales (
V
154–158 in
3 males
,
161–170 in
5 females
) and slightly longer relative tail (TaL/TL
0.305–0.309 in
2 adult
males;
0.277–0.297 in
5 adult
females).
Etymology.
We name the new species in honor of Dr. Ngô Văn Bὶnh, a Vietnamese herpetologist who passed away suddenly in 2023 at the age of 49 by a serious stroke. We recommend “Binh’s Bronzeback Snake” and “Rắn leo cây bὶnh” as the common English and Vietnamese names of the new species, respectively.
Distribution.
The new species is currently known from Thuan Nam,
Ninh Thuan Province
and Tuy Phong,
Binh Thuan Province
,
Vietnam
(
Fig. 1
).
FIGURE 4.
Dendrelaphis binhi
sp. nov.
A, drawing of head scalation (scale bar 5 mm) of the holotype ITBCZ 6663; B&C, sulcal and asulcal views of hemipenis of the holotype ITBCZ 6663, respectively; D, hemipenes of paratype ITBCZ 6665; E, maxillary teeth of paratype ITBCZ 5945.
Field notes.
All
specimens were collected at night, between 7:00
PM
and 11:00
PM
, while sleeping on brushes at about
1–2 m
above ground.
The
habitat in
Thuan Nam
,
Ninh Thuan Province
is a coastal hill with brushes and granite outcrops (
Fig. 5B
) and the habitat in
Tuy Phong
,
Binh Thuan Province
is an agricultural area with scattered large brushes.
The
holotype
was collected on a large brush group together with
paratypes
ITBCZ 6664
and
ITBCZ 6665
and with two other individuals of
Ahaetulla fusca
(Dumeril, Bibron & Dumeril)
.
Gravid
paratype
ITBCZ 5946
has
three eggs
.
Comparisons.
Dendrelaphis binhi
sp. nov.
differs morphologically from all congeners in Indochina as follows: from
D. biloreatus
(Wall, 1908)
by having fewer ventrals (154–170 vs. 187–199), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 139–145), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Smith 1943
); from
D. caudolineatus
by having fewer ventrals in males (154–158 vs. 171–180), fewer ventrals in females (161–170 vs. 171–185), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and absence (vs. presence) of black longitudinal stripes along the entire length of the body (
Rooijen & Vogel 2012
); from
D. cyanochloris
(Wall, 1921)
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), fewer ventrals (154–170 vs. 181–206), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 135–157), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Rooijen & Vogel 2008
;
Jiang
et al
. 2020
); from
D. formosus
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), fewer ventrals (154–170 vs. 172–194), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 142–162), and one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye (
Jiang
et al
. 2020
); from
D. haasi
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Das 2015
); from
D. kopsteini
Vogel & Van Rooijen, 2007
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Vogel & Rooijen 2007
); from
D. ngansonensis
by having fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 117–153), one (vs. two or three) supralabial entering the eye, vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged), fewer maxillary teeth (18 or 19 vs. 24 or 25), and shorter hemipenis (extending to SC 10 or 11 vs. SC 18) (
Ziegler & Vogel 1999
;
Jiang
et al
. 2020
); from
D. nigroserratus
Vogel, Rooijen & Hauser, 2012
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), fewer ventrals (154–170 vs. 197– 204), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 148–152), one (vs. three) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Vogel
et al
. 2012
); from
D. pictus
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 113–148), fewer maxillary teeth (18 or 19 vs. 23–28), one (vs. two or three) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Smith 1943
;
Vogel & Rooijen 2008
); from
D. striatus
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), one (vs. two or three) supralabial entering the eye, and absence (vs. presence) of black oblique bars laterally on the body (
Ziegler & Vogel 1999
;
Vogel & Rooijen 2007
); from
D. subocularis
by having fewer dorsal scale rows at neck (13 vs. 15) and at midbody (13 vs. 15), and fewer maxillary teeth (18 or 19 vs. 21–23) (
Smith 1943
;
Rooijen & Vogel 2010
); from
D. tristis
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 108–145), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and longer hemipenis (extending to SC 10 or 11 vs. SC 8) (
Smith 1943
); from
D. vogeli
by having fewer midbody scale rows (13 vs. 15), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, fewer ventrals (154–170 vs. 193–197), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 130–135), and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Jiang
et al
. 2020
); and from
D. walli
Vogel & Rooijen, 2011
by having fewer ventrals (154–170 vs. 193–197), fewer subcaudals (95–106 vs. 130–135), one (vs. two) supralabial entering the eye, and vertebral scale row slightly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged) (
Vogel & Rooijen 2011
).