Two new Kukri Snake species (Colubridae: Oligodon) from the Nakhon Si Thammarat Mountain Range, and addition of O. ocellatus to the fauna of Thailand
Author
Pauwels, Olivier S. G.
Author
Thongyai, Kanokorn
0000-0002-2182-993X
Program in Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology, Suratthani Rajabhat University, 227 M. 9 Khun Thale, Muang, Surat Thani 84100, Thailand. Kanokorn. tho @ sru. ac. th; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 2182 - 993 X
anokorn.tho@sru.ac.th
Author
Chantong, Pajapon
106 / 214 Makham Tia Sub-district, Muang District, Surat Thani 84000, Thailand.
Author
Sumontha, Montri
0000-0003-4829-7731
Ranong Marine Fisheries Research and Development Station, 157 Chalerm Phrakiat Rd., Paknam, Muang, Ranong 85000, Thailand. montri. sumontha @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 4829 - 7731
montri.sumontha@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-01-18
4908
4
537
557
journal article
8724
10.11646/zootaxa.4908.4.7
e235705c-4d4e-4c03-8ef8-4d122c9a953f
1175-5326
4447253
6EFA1B9D-B7C2-41FC-A0FD-D0F68EBD2622
Addition of
Oligodon ocellatus
to the herpetofauna of
Thailand
In their description of
Oligodon jintakunei
,
Pauwels
et al.
(2002)
listed as such the following specimen among the comparative preserved material they examined: “
Oligodon
‘
ocellatus
’ -
FMNH
143301, Chong Mek,
Thailand
”. At that time
Oligodon ocellatus
was poorly characterized versus its closest relatives and a positive identification was difficult. Meanwhile David
et al.
(2008) reviewed
Oligodon ocellatus
, confirmed
O. analepticos
as a synonym of the latter, and described the closely related
O. saintgironsi
.
Oligodon ocellatus
is known from
Cambodia
, southern
Laos
and southern
Vietnam
(David
et al.
2008;
Teynié & David 2010
;
Uetz
et al.
2020
).
The preserved specimen
FMNH
143301, an adult male, has not yet been re-examined in light of the taxonomic and morphological revision of David
et al.
(2008). It shows a robust but elongate body (
Fig. 11
). Tail robust, tapering.
SVL
354 mm
; TaL
58 mm
; ratio TaL/TL 0.14. Round pupil. 1 PV + 163 VEN (the last VEN is forked on the right side), laterally slightly angulated; a single anal and 39 divided SC. 19-19-15 DSR, all smooth; no apical pit. DSR reduction from 19 to 17 occurs above the 96
th
VEN (left and right) by fusion of DSR 5 and 6. DSR reduction from 17 to 15 occurs above the 109
th
(left) and 111
th
(right) VEN by fusion of DSR 4 and 5. Two internasals, in broad contact, shorter than prefrontals. Two prefrontals, subrectangular, distinctly wider than long. 1/1 supraoculars, distinctly longer than wide; 8/8 SL, the 4
th
and 5
th
in contact with orbit; 9/9 IL, 1
st
pair in contact behind mental, IL
1 to 4 in
contact with anterior chin shields. First pair of chin shields much longer than 2
nd
pair, and about the same width. LOR 1/1, in contact on each side with post-nasal, prefrontal, PreOc, and 2
nd
and 3
rd
SL. PreOc 1/1, the upper one much taller. PreSubOc 1/1, much smaller than PreOc; no SubOc; PosOc 2/2, of subequal size. Tem 2+2 on each side. A dark mark on forehead, extending below the eyes to SL 5 and 6. Two dark marks extending from the frontal to the angle of the mouth. A chevron with its apex on the middle of the frontal, extending posteriorly to the first DSR above the 10
th
VEN; 11 blotches on dorsum, separated by three reticulations; 3 more such blotches above tail, with less contrasted reticulations in between. Underside of head, body and tail uniformly cream, without any blotch or speckling.
FIGURE 9.
Map of Thailand showing the geographical locations for
Oligodon phangan
(yellow) and
O. promsombuti
(red)
spp. nov.
and the first known Thai locality for
O. ocellatus
(blue). Type-localities are indicated by a star. Map by W. Sodoab.
David
et al.
(2008) provided the following diagnosis for
Oligodon ocellatus
: “A species of the genus
Oligodon cyclurus
-group, characterized by long and deeply forked hemipenes, reaching 15th–17th SC, thin, smooth and not spinose throughout; 19-19-15 (rarely 13) dorsal scale rows; reductions between 19 and 17 rows occurring between VEN 79–107 (mean 90.3); a very short tail, TaL/TL
0.097
–0.141
; 9–11 maxillary teeth, the last two or three strongly enlarged; anal plate single; head scalation complete, including a presubocular; 8 (rarely 7) supralabials; 2 anterior temporals; and a typically blotched dorsal pattern, with large blotches in most specimens, or sometimes merely a reticulated pattern with very faint blotches.” They added that it showed 157–180 VEN and 26–44 SC. The specimen
FMNH 143301
perfectly fits with this description
.
Chong Mek (
15°07’59.0”N
,
105°28’01.0”E
) is located in the
Sirindhorn District
of Ubon Ratchathani Province in eastern
Thailand
, about 90 airline km east of the city of Ubon Ratchathani.
It
is a border town between
Thailand
and
Laos
.
This
is thus the first formal record of the species from
Thailand
.
The
closest known locality is
Ban Kiatngong
(= Ban Khiet Ngong) in
Xe Pian National Bio-Diversity Conservation Area
,
Champassak Province
, southern
Laos
(
Teynié & David 2010
); it is located at about 75 airline km SE of the new
Thai
locality
.
We take this opportunity to confirm the presence of
Oligodon mouhoti
in
Uthai Thani Province
, western
Thailand
. The photograph of a live juvenile individual was provided by
Cox
et al
. (1998)
to illustrate their account for this species. Its coloration and pattern are diagnostic for the species: two dark longitudinal paravertebral stripes edging a yellowish vertebral stripe; two narrower dorsolateral stripes; two large rounded, black blotches on the upper surface of the tail, one at its base, the other one near the tip; and five major markings on upper head surface; it shows no dark hexagonal or butterfly-like dorsal blotches on the body. No locality was indicated for the photograph, but P. P. van Dijk (pers. comm. to
OSGP
,
Feb. 1999
) took it in the part of Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary located in
Uthai Thani Province
. The individual’s total length was about
12 cm
(van Dijk, pers. comm.). The species was not recorded from
Uthai Thani Province
by David
et al
. (2008); it was listed by
Cox
et al
. (2012: 290)
from
Uthai Thani Province
but without more detail on location or voucher reference.