Herbertophis plumbeus Macleay, 1884 :434

Kaiser, Christine M., Kaiser, Hinrich & O’Shea, Mark, 2018, The taxonomic history of Indo-Papuan groundsnakes, genus Stegonotus Duméril et al., 1854 (Colubridae), with some taxonomic revisions and the designation of a neotype for S. parvus (Meyer, 1874), Zootaxa 4512 (1), pp. 1-73 : 37

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4512.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E752FB7B-F34C-4D12-B8A2-EA6C791DD6C7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5997391

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C80EBE29-FFE3-FFD2-FF75-FD6F0A60F80F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Herbertophis plumbeus Macleay, 1884 :434
status

 

Herbertophis plumbeus Macleay, 1884:434

Taxonomic status. Junior synonym of S. australis . Type species of the genus Herbertophis Macleay, 1884:434 .

Synonyms. None.

Original name. Herbertophis plumbeus Macleay, 1884:434 . The genus name translates as “Herbert snake,” in reference to the Herbert River, Queensland, Australia. The species name comes from the Latin, with plumbeus meaning lead-like, presumably to denote the snake’s “nitid 17 leaden-black colour above” ( Macleay 1884:434). The species description was presented in English.

Holotype. AMS R31895 ( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21 ; Table 1), an adult male.

Type locality. “Ripple Creek, Herbert River” [Ripple Creek Plantation along the Herbert River, near Ingham, Queensland, Australia, ca. 18.58°S, 146.21°E]. Ripple Creek is a small tributary to the Herbert River, but it is unlikely that collection activity was specific to the creek only. Instead, the specimen could have been collected anywhere on the lands of the Ripple Creek Plantation ( Connor 2017). The sugar cane plantation, now defunct, extended from the northern bank of the Herbert River, in the area where Ripple Creek enters the river, to the Seymour River (ca. 3 km to the north).

Collection. At the beginning of his account, Macleay (1884) recounted that a few days before the writing of this paper commenced, “Mr. Archibald Boyd of Ripple Creek, Herbert River” brought him “an earthenware jar” with a series of unidentified vertebrates. We believe that the jar’s contents came from the collecting activities of the then-plantation overseer, John Archibald Boyd (1846–1926; Fig. 17D View FIGURE 17 ), who had become an expert collector of natural history specimens during nearly two decades spent in Fiji ( Henry 2014; Greer et al. 2016). The photograph of Boyd ( Fig. 17D View FIGURE 17 ; public domain) was taken in 1888 by the Australian photographer Algernon Hall (1828–1905), who made his name photographing towns and portraits in Victoria and Queensland.

Key characteristics of the holotype. [984] (1025) mm SVL + “9¼ inches” [235] (250) mm TL = “ 4 feet ” [1219] (1275) mm TTL. V ♂ = 219 (220), SC ♂ = 74 (74), SCR ♂ = 0.25 (0.25), D = O-17-O (17-17-15), SL E = 3+4+5 (3+4+5), SL = 9 (9), IL = 10 (10), IL G = O (5). The dorsal count of 17 was provided in the generic description, as a diagnostic feature of Herbertophis .

Key characteristics of the species. See the account of S. australis above.

Comment. Macleay (1884) placed his new genus Herbertophis into “Gray’s family or group, Coronellidae” (now part of Colubridae ).

17. The term “nitid” comes from the Latin and means shiny or glistening. We assume that this term is used here to indicate that the snake’s color is not a matte black but a shiny black. It could also be used to imply the presence of iridescent sheen.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Colubridae

Genus

Herbertophis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Colubridae

Genus

Zamenophis

Loc

Herbertophis plumbeus Macleay, 1884 :434

Kaiser, Christine M., Kaiser, Hinrich & O’Shea, Mark 2018
2018
Loc

Herbertophis plumbeus

Macleay, W. 1884: 434
1884
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