A new skink of the genus Sphenomorphus Fitzinger, 1843 (Squamata: Scincidae) from Hon Ba Nature Reserve, southern Vietnam
Author
Nguyen, Sang Ngoc
Author
Nguyen, Luan Thanh
Author
Nguyen, Vu Dang Hoang
Author
Orlov, Nikolai L.
Author
Murphy, Robert W.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-06-21
4438
2
313
326
journal article
29841
10.11646/zootaxa.4438.2.6
fcb2bfd4-caf1-4467-b6c4-a9d5ad013e17
1175-5326
1294774
5D28883B-01C3-426B-9117-9F946D5E86DB
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1–4
)
Holotype
.
ITBCZ 5685
, adult male, collected from
Hon Ba NR
.,
Khanh
Hoa Province
,
Vietnam
; coordinates
12°8’13”N
,
108°57’39”E
;
elevation
1162 m
a.s.l.
by
L.T. Nguyen
,
V.D.H. Nguyen
, and
S.N. Nguyen
on
16 October 2016
(
Fig. 1
).
Paratypes
. Two specimens, also collected from Hon Ba NR by L.T. Nguyen, V.D.H. Nguyen, and S.N. Nguyen:
ITBCZ
5686, adult female (
Fig. 2C&D
), and
ITBCZ
5684, adult male (
Figs. 2A&B
and
3
), collected on
14 October 2016
, coordinates
12°8’22”N
,
108°58’06”E
; elevation
932 m
a.s.l.
Referred specimen
. HBA 44 (released,
Fig. 4
), adult female, collected on
19 October 2016
, coordinates 12°8’22”N, 108°58’06”E; elevation
932 m
a.s.l.
Diagnosis
.
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
is distinguished from all of its congeners by a combination of the following morphological characters: size in adults (SVL) up to
56 mm
; TaL/SVL ratio 1.81; toes reach to fingers when limbs adpressed; 32–34 smooth midbody scale rows; 61–69 paravertebral scales; 58–67 ventral scale rows; 112 subcaudal scales; four, rarely five, supraoculars; prefrontals in broad contact with one another; two loreal scales; tympanum deeply sunk; smooth lamellae beneath Finger IV and Toe
IV 10–12 and 18
–20, respectively; two enlarged precloacal scales; hemipenis smooth, deeply forked, asymmetrical with a long lobe and another short; black and interruptive dorsolateral line; lateral side and lower part of head, neck, and tail orange to red in male.
FIGURE 1.
Holotype of
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
, ITBCZ 5685. A, dorsolateral view; B, ventral view; C&D, dorsal and lateral views of head; E, lower eyelid scaly; F, two asymmetrical hemipenes in preservation.
Description of
holotype
.
Adult male; head small and elongate (HW/HL = 0.7); SVL
54 mm
; tail long (TaL/ SVL = 1.81),
98 mm
in length; lower eyelid scaly; tympanum deeply sunk with a prominent oblique edge; limbs pentadactyl, toes reach to fingers when limbs adpressed.
Head scalation smooth; rostral convex, distinctly visible from above, in broad contact with frontonasal, which is broader than long; no supranasals; prefrontals in broad contact with one another; 5 supraoculars on left side and 4 on right side; a pair of frontoparietals, shorter than frontal; frontal narrowing posteriorly, longer than wide, bordered laterally by first two supraoculars, anteriorly by prefrontals, and posteriorly by frontoparietals; frontoparietals in contact with the second to fifth supraoculars on left side and the second to fourth supraoculars on right side; parietals in contact posteriorly, behind the interparietal; no nuchal; 7 supralabials on both sides, the fifth and sixth below the eye; 2 loreals, posterior loreal larger than anterior; nostril in center of nasal, which is in contact with the first supralabial, rostral, anterior loreal, and frontonasal; 8 supraciliaries, first largest; 1 anterior temporal, in contact with sixth and seventh supralabials; 2 secondary temporals, lower temporal overlapping upper one and in contact with seventh supralabial, upper temporal larger, in contact with parietal; lower eyelid scaly, 2 scales in center larger than scales in posterior and anterior areas; 6 infralabials, first pair medially in contact with each other; 1 anterior and 2 postmentals.
Dorsal scales smooth, not larger than lateral and ventral scales; 34 midbody scale rows; 61 paravertebral scales; ventral scales smooth, in 60 rows; 112 subcaudal scales, slightly enlarged posteriorly; 11 and 20 smooth lamellae beneath finger IV and toe IV, respectively; 2 enlarged precloacal scales.
Hemipenes
. Each hemipenis deeply forked and asymmetrical with two smooth lobes. In fully everted position, the inner lobe is shorter and the outer lobe is much longer. Clear sulcus spermaticus starts from the base, divides into two branches at the fork and extends to the tips of the two lobes; body of the long lobe forming regular transversal shallow grooves and ending with terminal papillae. Short lobe obtuse, not forming regular transversal shallow grooves (
Fig. 1F
).
Coloration
. In life, overall dorsal coloration black (Hex #000000) to dark brown (Hex #654321) with two interrupted copper (Hex #B87333) dorsal lines in margins of dorsum extending from neck to base of tail; black and interrupted lateral lines under the copper ones; dorsum with irregular black spots; lateral side and lower part of head, neck, and tail orange (Hex #FF6600) to red (Hex #FE2712); venter from chest to tail base yellow (Hex #FFD300) to cream (Hex #FFFDD0); upper side of limbs black with bright dots. Lateral margins of supralabials and infralabials with black blotches. Free margin of upper eyelid orange and the margin of lower eyelid yellow (Hex #FFD300). Eyes black. In preservation, color fades; orange and yellow disappear; overall dorsal coloration black with two interrupted brighter lines in margins of dorsum extending from neck to base of tail; venter zebra white (Hex #F5F5F5).
FIGURE 2.
Paratypes of
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
A&B, ITBCZ 5684, male; C&D, ITBCZ 5686, female. Scales in lower eyelid can be observed in figures B and D.
Variation.
Table 2
summarizes variation in size and scalation of the
holotype
,
paratypes
, and referred specimen. Supraoculars four in all specimens except for the left side of the
holotype
which bears 5 scales. Midbody scale rows vary from 32 to 34. Paravertebral and ventral scale rows range from 61 to 69 and from 58 to 67, respectively. Hemipenes of the second
paratype
ITBCZ 5684 (
Fig. 3
) similar to those of the
holotype
in being deeply forked and asymmetrical.
Natural history.
All specimens were collected at night and under rotting leaf layer in evergreen forest (
Fig. 5
), elevations
932 m
and
1162 m
a.s.l., between 19:00–23:30. However, the species was observed being active in the daytime and it may be diurnal.
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
was observed to be sympatric with other congener,
S. indicus
.
Sexual dimorphism.
Males are larger than females (SVL
56 mm
vs.
52 mm
, n=4) and have orange (Hex #FF6600) or red (Hex #FE2712) color on lateral sides and lower part of head, neck, and tail. The color on the lateral side in females faded to yellow (Hex #FFD300) or brown (Hex #964B00) with bright spots; lower part of head, limbs, and tail white (Hex #FFFFFF) to zebra white (Hex #F5F5F5); venter from neck to vent yellow (Hex #FCE883).
FIGURE 3.
Hemipenes of paratype ITBCZ 5684 of
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
A&B, sulcate and asulcate views of the right hemipenis, respectively (fresh); B&C, asulcate and sulcate views of left hemipenis, respectively (fresh); E&F, the two hemipenes in preservation.
FIGURE 4.
Released referred specimen HBA 44 of
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
A–C, living specimen; D–H, midbody scale rows illustrated and checked via detail photos. Photographs detail five parts. Red spots are marks on midbody; blue dots illustrate counting of 33 longitudinal scale rows.
Distribution.
The new species is currently known only from Hon Ba NR,
Khanh Hoa Province
, southern
Vietnam
(
Fig. 5
).
Etymology
. We name this new species in honor of the famous physician and bacteriologist, Alexandre Yersin (
1863–1943
), who discovered the bacterium responsible for bubonic plague. Hon Ba NR associates with the name of Alexandre Yersin who built a research station on the top of the mountain and worked there. Currently, the research station has been reconstructed and opened to visitors. We recommend Yersin’s Forest Skink as the common name of this new species.
FIGURE 5.
Map (left) showing the type locality (red dot) of
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
in southern Vietnam and habitat (right) of the new species in Hon Ba Nature Reserve.
Comparisons.
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
differs from its congeners in Indochina (
Vietnam
,
Laos
,
Cambodia
,
Thailand
,
Myanmar
, Peninsular
Malaysia
, and southern
China
[
Yunnan
]) as follows: from
S. anomalopus
(Boulenger)
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
70 mm
), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 38) and more lamellae beneath toe IV (18–20 vs. 14); from
S. bacboensis
by having one (vs. two) anterior temporal, more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 30–32), and more supralabials (7 vs. 6); from
S. cameronicus
Smith
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
70 mm
) and fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 38); from
S. cophias
Boulenger
by having a larger size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
37 mm
), more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 24), more lamellae under fourth toe (18–20 vs. 9) and prefrontals in broad contact (vs. separated); from
S. cryptotis
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
58–79 mm
), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 36–39) and tympanum deeply sunk (vs. superficial); from
S. grandisonae
Taylor
by having a larger size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
30 mm
), one (vs. two) anterior temporal, more supralabials (7 vs. 6) and lamellae under toe IV (18–20 vs. 12), and adpressed limbs overlapping (vs. failing to touch); from
S. helenae
Cochran
by having more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 30), prefrontals in broad contact (vs. separated), and presence of an interrupted (vs. uninterrupted) lateral stripe; from
S. incognitus
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
80–103 mm
), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 36–40), and one (vs. two) anterior temporal; from
S. indicus
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
90 mm
), prefrontals in broad contact (vs. separated), and asymmetrical and deeply forked hemipenis (vs. symmetrical); from
S. lineopunctulatus
Taylor
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
84 mm
), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 38), fewer paravertebral scale rows (61–69 vs. 76), and prefrontals in broad contact (vs. separated); from
S. maculatus
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
62 mm
), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 38–42), and prefrontals in broad contact (vs. separated); from
S. malayanum
by having fewer ventral scales (32–34 vs. 74), fewer paravertebral scales (61–69 vs. 76–80), more lamellae under fourth toe (18–20 vs. 15), and deeply sunk (vs. shallow) tympanum; from
S. mimicus
by having a larger size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
36 mm
), more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 30) and more lamellae under fourth toe (18–20 vs. 16); from
S. orientale
(Shreve)
by having more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 24–26) and fewer paravertebral scale rows (61– 69 vs. 69–71); and from
S. praesignis
(Boulenger)
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
109 mm
) and more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 28).
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
differs from
S. sanctus
(Duméril & Bibron)
by having a larger size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
40–45 mm
), fewer paravertebral scales (61–69 vs. 71), fewer supraoculars (4[5] vs. 5), and fewer lamellae under toe IV (18–20 vs. 26–27); from
S. scotophilus
(Boulenger)
by having more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 28–31), fewer supraoculars (4 vs. 5), and fewer lamellae under fourth toe (18–20 vs. 22–23); from
S. senja
Grismer & Quah
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
60–65 mm
), fewer paravertebral scales (61–69 vs. 72–73), fewer ventral scale rows (60–67 vs. 68), one (vs. two) anterior temporal, more lamellae under toe IV (18–20 vs. 13–17) and prefrontals in broad contact with each other (vs. narrow in contact or slightly separated); from
S. sheai
by having a larger size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
35 mm
), more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 20), more paravertebral scales (61–69 vs. 53), more supralabials (7 vs. 6), more lamellae under fourth toe (18–20 vs. 6), and adpressed limbs overlapping (vs. separated); from
S. shelfordi
(
Boulenger 1900
)
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
67 mm
), fewer lamellae under toe IV (18–20 vs. 28–29) and the absence of nuchals (vs. presence of a single pair of nuchals); from
S. stellatus
by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
80 mm
), more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 24) and absence (vs. presence) of two enlarged, broader than long, vertebral scale rows; from
S. sungaicolus
Sumarli, Grismer, Wood, Ahmad
,
Rizal
, Ismail, Izam, Ahmad & Linkem by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
67–90 mm
), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 39–44), fewer paravertebral scales (61–69 vs. 72–81) and fewer ventral scale rows (32–34 vs. 74–86); from
S. tarsus
(Smith) by having a smaller size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
90–92 mm
) and two loreals (vs. three); from
S. tetradactylus
by having more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 20), absence (vs. presence) of external ear opening, and forelimb with five digits (vs. four digits); from
S. tonkinensis
by having a larger size (SVL
50–56 mm
vs.
36–49 mm
), TaL/ SVL ratio 1.80 (vs. 1.32), and one (vs. two) anterior temporal; from
S. tridigitus
by having a larger size (SVL 50– 56 vs. 35), more midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 20), absence (vs. presence) of external ear opening and forelimb with five digits (vs. three digits); and from
S. tritaeniatus
by having a larger size (SVL 50–56 vs. 47), fewer midbody scale rows (32–34 vs. 38) and paravertebral scales (61–69 vs. 81), more lamellae under toe IV (18–20 vs. 15) and one anterior temporal (vs. two).
FIGURE 6.
Examined specimens of
Sphenomorphus buenloicus
. A–C, holotype, ZISP 19795, hemipenes in C showing forked points near the tips of the organs; D, ITBCZ 5060 (upper) and ITBCZ 4357 (lower); E&F, lateral views of ITBCZ 5060 and ITBCZ 4357, respectively.
FIGURE 7.
Additional specimen (ITBCZ 6027) of
Sphenomorphus buenloicus
from Tram Lap Forest, Gia Lai Prov. showing the fully everted hemipenes. A, living specimen; B, hemipenes under not in fully everted condition (note that this is similar to the condition of the holotype’s hemipenes in figure 6C); C&D, sulcate and asulcate views of the right hemipenis, respectively.
Sphenomorphus yersini
sp. nov.
is similar to
S. buenloicus
in many aspects (size, midbody scale rows, number of anterior temporals, lamellae under fourth toe, etc.). However, the new species can be distinguished from
S. buenloicus
by having a relatively longer tail (TaL/SVL ratio 1.8 vs. 1.2), usually more ventral scale rows (58–67 vs. 55–58) and deeply forked hemipenis with two asymmetrical lobes and the outer lobe is much longer than the inner one (vs. hemipenis forked at the middle point of its length with two developing lobes and the outer lobe is slightly longer than the inner one [
Figs. 6
&
7
]).