In praise of subgenera: taxonomic status of cobras of the genus Naja Laurenti (Serpentes: Elapidae)
Author
Wallach, Van
Author
Wüster, Wolfgang
Author
Broadley, Donald G.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2236
26
36
journal article
40538
10.5281/zenodo.190422
91754df8-5dc8-4493-82bd-1e56e936e931
1175-5326
190422
AEB99F9B-67AF-495F-9657-0C5798A29B74
Subgenus
Boulengerina
Dollo, 1886
Limnonaja
Schmidt, 1923
: 124
(
type
species
Boulengerina christyi
Boulenger, 1904
)
Paranaja
Loveridge, 1944
: 231
(
type
species
Naja anomala
Sternfeld
=
Naia multifasciata
Werner, 1902
)
Type
species:
Boulengerina stormsi
Dollo, 1886
(=
Naja annulata
Buchholz & Peters
in
Peters, 1876
), by monotypy.
Gender
: feminine.
Etymology
: dedicated to George Albert Boulenger, famous Belgian herpetologist, and curator of reptiles at the British Museum (Natural History) in London from
1881 to 1920
.
Distribution
: forested regions of western, central, eastern and south-eastern Africa.
Content
: four species:
Naja (Boulengerina) annulata
Buchholz & Peters
in
Peters, 1876
: 119
Naja (Boulengerina) christyi
(
Boulenger, 1904: 14
)
Naja (Boulengerina) melanoleuca
Hallowell, 1857
: 61
Naja (Boulengerina) multifasciata
Werner, 1902
: 347
Diagnosis
: Intracranial (dorsal) anterior Vidian canal position, 2–4 solid maxillary teeth, penultimate (sixth) supralabial high, combination of one preocular and one anterior temporal (except
N. christyi
, which sometimes has two anterior temporals), rostral much broader than deep, internasals shorter than prefrontals, dorsal scales highly polished, fangs not modified for spitting.
Comments
: This subgenus is morphologically and ecologically highly diverse, including species at both the large (
Naja melanoleuca
) and small (
Naja multifasciata
) extremes of the size spectrum of the cobra clade, and semi-fossorial, terrestrial and aquatic forms. However, they are united by their restriction to forest and forest edge habitats, and their distribution is centred on the central African forests, with only
N. melanoleuca
extending significantly into West and East Africa.