Craspedocephalus travancoricus, Mallik & Srikanthan & Ganesh & Vijayakumar & Campbell & Malhotra & Shanker, 2021
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/vz.71.e66239 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:58FD15FC-CC21-446A-98EB-060F3996B29B |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EF98683B-4802-53E2-8C0E-4130018B2668 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Craspedocephalus travancoricus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Craspedocephalus travancoricus View in CoL sp. nov.
Figures 16 View Figure 16 , 17 View Figure 17 , 18 View Figure 18
Trimeresurus anamallensis (not of Günther, 1864) - Ferguson, 1895
Trimeresurus malabaricus (not of Jerdon, 1854) - Inger et al., 1984, Ishwar et al., 2001
Materials examined
Holotype: BNHS 3595 (CESS074) from Bonnakard, Peppara, Kerala by Saunak Pal and S. P. Vijayakumar in 2010; BNHS 2607 from Thiruvananthapuram, collector and year unknown. - Paratype: BNHS 3594 (CESS257) from Devarmalai, Tamil Nadu by Saunak Pal and Mrugank Prabhu in 2011.
Type Locality.
Peppara (8°39.7167'N; 77°10.7167'E), Kerala, a part of the Agasthyamalai Hill complex of the Southern Western Ghats.
Etymology.
Toponym, named after its distribution in the far south of the Western Ghats, in the southern parts of the ‘Travancore’ hill ranges.
Remarks.
As previously elaborated and clarified (see C. malabaricus account), historical collections and typifications (both prevailing and previously synonymized treatments) did not involve the population circumscribed here as a distinct lineage. Therefore, this innominate population, previously cited (see Inger et al. 1984; Ishwar et al. 2001) under the chresonymy of C. malabaricus s. lat. is here named anew.
Lineage diagnosis.
A cryptic lineage belonging to the C. malabaricus complex, this lineage (L4) is genetically divergent from C. malabaricus (L5) by 9% & 2.2% and from C. anamallensis (L3) by 7.1 & 1.5% at cyt b and 16S respectively. This lineage is also allopatric with its related taxa C. malabaricus occurring north of the Palghat Gap and is immediately allopatric with C. anamallensis distributed just north of its distribution range, north of the Shencottah Gap.
Description.
Holotype in good condition, dissected, with a slender, cylindrical body of snout to vent length (SVL) 345 mm and a prehensile tail of length (TL) 61 mm; dorsal scales keeled with anterior dorsal scale rows (DSR) 21, mid body scale rows (MSR) 23 and posterior scale rows (PSR) 14-15; head prominent, of length 20.28 mm, clearly distinguished from the neck with small, juxtaposed dorsal scales on the head; rostral scale sub triangular with the upper side roughly half the size of the lower side with the tip visible from above supraoculars of length 3.64 mm and width 1.0 mm, separated by seven scales, between the posterior edge of the supraocular scales; canthus rostralis distinct with four canthal scales on the ridge; three preoculars, two postoculars and a thin elongated crescent shaped subocular, in contact with a small scale, encompassed by the third and fourth supralabial scale; eye with a distinct elliptical pupil, vertical diameter of the eye 2.6 mm and horizontal diameter 3.4 mm.; temporal scales mildly keeled; aperture of the nostril completely covered by the nasal scale, undivided and subrectangular; nasal scale bordering the first supralabial; loreal pit present in contact with the second supralabial with two scales between the nasal and the second supralabial: nine supralabials and 11 infralabials, with nine scales between the last supralabial, including the last supralabial till the start of the ventral scales; 1st, 2nd and 3rd infralabial scale in contact with the first pair of genials; a gap of three scales including the posterior genials followed by 147 ventrals, laterally separated from the dorsal scale rows by a slightly broader row of dorsal scales; anal scale undivided, followed by 55 to 56 divided subcaudals scales; terminal scale on the tail larger than the previous scale, blunt at the tip.
Variation.
The paratypes have SVL upto 282 mm and TL 65 mm, and differ from the holotype with respect to pholidosis by having 20 to 21 DSR, 21 MSR, 14 to 15 PSR, 157 ventrals and 55 subcaudals; three to four canthal scales on the canthus rostralis, and seven to nine cephalic scales from above; 10 to 12 infralabials on both sides.
Colour in life.
Head dorsum almost covered with dark brown to purplish brown colour with scales bordered with light yellowish green; postocular and preocular stripe almost indistinguishable from the head dorsum colour, separated with a faded yellowish green stripe; dark brown postocular stripe about 3 scales wide, a preocular/ temporal stripe that continues to the loreal pit and ends at the supralabials below; black border markings on the labials below the suboculars and anterior supralabials; body in light faded green and brown marbled scales with 28 brown saddle shaped markings, the markings centered with faded brown marbled markings; the row dorsal of scales that meet the ventrals alternate between the dorsal marked with faded yellow and dark brown with a gap of two to three scales in between them; ventrals plain light creamish yellow; subcaudals in black with yellow blotches; tail with 13 yellowish green bands on dark brown to black; eyes silverish with a tinge of yellow, rufous red blotches throughout the eye, concentrated towards the middle, perpendicular to the pupil, almost forming a cross.
Colour in preservative.
Similar to colouration in life with brighter colours faded dull and yellows throughout the body bleached to a creamish white colour; pupils bluish white, dilated.
Habitat.
Similar to other members of the C. malabaricus group, an arboreal species, commonly found on bushes and in the undergrowth in forests and near streams in moist evergreen forests to deciduous and lowland riparian forests, from 100-1800 m asl.
Distribution.
Recorded mostly from Agasthyamalai with a single isolated record from Devarmalai hills, across the Shencottah gap. This species may occur sympatrically with C. peltopelor sp. nov. in the highest elevations of Agasthyamalai.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Family |
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SubFamily |
Crotalinae |
Genus |
Craspedocephalus travancoricus
Mallik, Ashok Kumar, Srikanthan, Achyuthan Needamangalam, Ganesh, Sumaithangi Rajagopalan, Vijayakumar, Seenapuram Palaniswamy, Campbell, Patrick D., Malhotra, Anita & Shanker, Kartik 2021 |
Trimeresurus anamallensis
Mallik & Srikanthan & Ganesh & Vijayakumar & Campbell & Malhotra & Shanker 2021 |
Trimeresurus malabaricus
Mallik & Srikanthan & Ganesh & Vijayakumar & Campbell & Malhotra & Shanker 2021 |