identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
09A5260E31A15CBAA44DDF3A92883500.text	09A5260E31A15CBAA44DDF3A92883500.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Colubroelaps adleri Poyarkov & Bragin & Nguyen 2024	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Table 1, Figs 2, 3 A – C, 4 A</p>
            <p>Holotype.</p>
            <p>
                  • ZMMU Re-18000 (field tag NAP-15227), adult female, collected by Nikolay A. Poyarkov and Andrey M. Bragin on June 17, 2023, from  
                <a title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 109.289/lat 12.198)" href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=109.289&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=12.198">Dam Bay Research Station</a>
                 , Hon Tre Island, within Nha Trang Bay in Vinh Nguyen Ward, Nha Trang City, Khanh Hoa Province, Vietnam (12.198 ° N, 109.289 ° E; at the elevation of 30 m asl.). 
            </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. can be distinguished from  C. nguyenvansangi by the following combination of morphological characters: body size small (TL 402 mm); tail relatively short (ratio TaL / TL 0.10); dorsal scales in 14–14 – 14 rows; supralabials six, third and fourth entering orbit; infralabials seven; loreal present; ventral scales 234; subcaudals 30, all divided; cloacal plate divided; dorsal coloration pale brown with narrow and interrupted dark stripe along spine; body flanks dark gray lacking bluish iridescence; ventrally uniform off-white; head black with rostral, nasals, prefrontals, preoculars, loreal, and the two anterior supralabials, as well as the anterior parts of supraoculars and frontal shields dirty yellowish-brown with dark brown spots. </p>
            <p>Description of the holotype.</p>
            <p>Adult female specimen in a good state of preservation (Fig. 2). Body strongly elongated, very thin, vermiform, round in cross-section. Tail obtusely rounded, comparatively short, the tip of tail blunt (SVL 362 mm; TaL 40.2 mm; TL 402.2 mm; ratio TaL / TL 0.10) (Fig. 2 E – G). Head very small, rounded, slightly dorso-ventrally depressed, covered by large, regular, symmetric shields (Figs 2 A – D, 3 A – C), not distinct from the neck (HL 7.99 mm; HW 5.16 mm; ratio HW / HL 0.65). Snout wide, short, bluntly rounded in dorsal view (Fig. 2 A, B), slightly tapering in lateral view (Fig. 2 C, D). Rostral barely visible in dorsal aspect, triangular (Figs 2 A, 3 A). Eyes very small with round pupils (ED 0.51 mm, EN 1.46 mm, SnL 2.78 mm) (Fig. 2 C, D). Single nasal on each side of head (1 / 1 nasals); nostril oval-shaped, with horizontal orienatation, completely enclosed in nasal scale, located closer to the posterior edge of nasal (Figs 2 C, D, 3 B); single (1 / 1) loreal, small, almost triangular in shape, shorter than the eye diameter, in contact with nasal, 1 st and 2 nd supralabial, preocular, prefrontal and internasal; single (1 / 1) preocular, large, elongated pentagonal in shape, subequal to the eye diameter, in contact with 2 nd and 3 rd supralabial, the orbit, supraocular, prefrontal and loreal; single (1 / 1) postocular, trapezoidal in shape, smaller than the eye diameter, in contact with 4 th supralabial, parietal, supraocular and the orbit; single (1 / 1) supraocular, large and wide, ca. twice longer than the eye diameter, in contact with the orbit, postocular, parietal, frontal, prefrontal and preocular (Figs 2 C, D, 3 B). Six supralabials on each side of the head (6 / 6), fourth one the largest, third and fourth supralabials in contact with eye, posterior edge of fourth supralabial in contact with anterior temporal, separating fifth supralabial from parietal; fourth supralabial in contact with parietal, postocular, and anterior temporal (Figs 2 C, D, 3 A); seven (7 / 7) infralabials, the anterior-most pair in contact with each other behind the mental (Figs 2 B, 3 C); the first four pairs of infralabials in contact with the anterior pair of chin shields (Figs 2 B, 3 C); fourth and fifth infralabials in contact with the posterior pair of chin shields (Figs 2 B, 3 C). Three gular scales aligned between the chin shields and the first preventral (Figs 2 B, 3 C). One pair of enlarged internasals, in contact with each other; one pair of enlarged prefrontals, in contact with each other; one wide, pentagonal frontal shield; one pair of wide, triangular parietals, in contact with each other, anteriorly separated by the protruding posterior edge of frontal (Figs 2 A, 3 B), posteriorly barely extending beyond posterior edges of upper posterior temporals (Fig. 3 B). Single (1 / 1) anterior temporal, quadrangular in shape; two (2 / 2) posterior temporals, lower one the largest, two and a half times larger than upper posterior temporal (Fig. 3 A, B), upper one rectangular-shaped, narrow, notably protruding beyond the upper edge of lower posterior temporal (Figs 2 C, D, 3 B), in dorsal aspect notably protruding beyond the posterior edge of parietal (Fig. 3 B). Dorsal scales in 14–14 – 14 rows. Dorsal scales rhomboid, tile-shaped, all smooth, and of the same size (Fig. 2 G). Ventrals 234; cloacal plate divided (Fig. 2 E); 30 subcaudals, all divided (Fig. 2 E, F).</p>
            <p>Coloration in life.</p>
            <p>Body glossy but lacking the metal / bluish iridescence (Figs 2 A – G, 4 A). Dorsal background coloration pale brown, with narrow and interrupted dark stripe along spine (Figs 2 G, 4 A), formed by small, ca. 1 scale in size, dark brown to black, diamond-shaped blotches (Fig. 2 A); body flanks dark gray, nearly black, with indistinct light gray mottling along the scale edges; ventral surface of body and tail off-white with light greenish tint (Fig. 2 E, F). Head black to dark brown with rostral, nasals, prefrontals, preoculars, loreal, the first two supralabials, as well as the anterior part of supraoculars and frontal shield dirty yellowish-brown with dark brown irregular spots (Fig. 2 A – D). Ventral surfaces of the head white with chocolate-brown blotches (Fig. 2 B). After one year in preservative, the background dorsal color faded to beige-gray, and yellowish parts faded to off-white; overall, the pattern of dark markings remained unchanged.</p>
            <p>Comparisons.</p>
            <p> The main differences between the new species and  C. nguyenvansangi are summarized in Table 1.  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. can be easily distinguished from  C. nguyenvansangi by having notably shorter tail (TaL / TL 0.10 in a single female vs. 0.21 in females and 0.21–0.23 in males; however, this character should be taken cautiously: the tail of  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. holotype may be incomplete; cases of caudal autotomy were earlier reported for the members of  Sibynophiidae and likely may also occur in  Colubroelaps ; see Mendelson, 1991), lower number of body scale rows (DSR 14–14 – 14 vs. 16–16 – 16); lower number of ventrals (VEN 234 in a single female vs. 267 in female, 282–292 in males); much lower number of subcaudals (SC 30 in a single female vs. 81 in female, 86–87 in males). Furthermore, the new species can be easily diagnosed from  C. nguyenvansangi by having three gular scales between the chin shields and the first preventral (vs. two) (Fig. 3 C, F); by fourth infralabial in contact with parietal and anterior temporal, separating fifth infralabial from parietal and postocular (vs. fifth infralabial in contact with parietal and postocular) (Fig. 3 A, D); by upper posterior temporal being elongated and much narrower than lower one, noticeably protruding beyond the level of the posterior edge of parietals (vs. upper posterior temporal small, as long as lower posterior temporal, not protruding beyond the level of the posterior edge of parietals) (Fig. 3 A – E).  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. can be further diagnosed from  C. nguyenvansangi by having pale brown dorsum with narrow and interrupted dark stripe along spine (vs. reddish-brown dorsum with narrow and continuous dark stripe along spine) (Fig. 4 A, B); by lacking the metallic iridescence on dorsum and body flanks (vs. body with bluish metallic iridescence) (Fig. 4 A, B); and by having dirty yellowish-brown anterior part of head with irregular dark brown blotches (vs. uniform light yellow to white blotch on anterior part of head lacking dark markings) (Fig. 4 A, B). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The species epithet ‘ adleri ’ is a patronymic adjective in genitive singular. We name the new species in honor of Dr. Kraig Adler, Professor Emeritus at Cornell University (New York, USA), in recognition of his outstanding support to the international herpetological community as well as his remarkable scientific contribution to Asian herpetology. We suggest the following common names for the new species: “ Adler’s lace snake ” (in English), “ Shnurkovaya zmeya Adlera ” (Шнурковая змея Адлера, in Russian), and “ R ắn h ổ nư ớc Át-Lơ ” (in Vietnamese).</p>
            <p>Distribution and natural history notes.</p>
            <p> Currently,  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. is known only from a single locality in secondary dry maritime evergreen forest on Hon Tre Island, Khanh Hoa Province, South Central Coastal Region of Vietnam (Figs 1, 5). The new species is also expected to inhabit other islands of the Nha Trang Bay, though they are much smaller than Hon Tre, and on some of them, forest vegetation has been greatly destroyed. The only known specimen of  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. was collected during the daytime (14 h 00) while crossing the road. The individual was collected near a garbage dump at the Dam Bay Research Station at 30 m a. s. l. elevation (Fig. 5 A), ca. 10 m from a dry maritime mixed low evergreen forest. The forest near the type locality is dominated by  Buchanania reticulata Hance ,  Choerospondias axillaris (Roxb.) Burtt. &amp; Hill ,  Pentaspadon annamense (Evrard &amp; Tardieu) Ph ạmh.,  Spondias pinnata (L. f.) Kurz, and  Ormosia sp. , including occasional trees of  Sindora siamensis Teijsm. ex Miq. ,  Streblus ilicifolius (S. Vidal) Corner , and  Eurya turfosa Gagnep , and with an undergrowth formed primarily by  Dracaena sp. and with occasional specimens of  Cycas rumphii Miq. (Fig. 5 B) (plant identification — A. N. Kuznetsov, pers. comm.). Other species of snakes recorded in sympatry with the new species at the type locality included  Lycodon davisonii (Blanford, 1878) ,  L. capucinus (Boie, 1827) ,  Ptyas korros (Schlegel, 1837) ,  Ophiophagus hannah (Cantor, 1836) , and  Trimeresurus albolabris (Gray, 1842) . </p>
            <p> A parasitic invasion of the Acanthocephala (Kölr.) worm was found in the subcutaneous cavity between the skin and the body muscles in the posterior third of the specimen length on its dorsal side (Figs 2 C, 4 A). The presence of this parasite may indicate that  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. likely feeds on insects, as these animals are the intermediate hosts for acanthocephalan parasitic worms. All other aspects of the ecology of  Colubroelaps adleri sp. nov. , including information on diet, preferred microhabitats, reproduction, and predators, remain unknown. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/09A5260E31A15CBAA44DDF3A92883500	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Poyarkov, Nikolay A.;Bragin, Andrey M.;Nguyen, Tan Van	Poyarkov, Nikolay A., Bragin, Andrey M., Nguyen, Tan Van (2024): A new endemic insular species of the genus Colubroelaps (Squamata, Serpentes, Colubroidea) from Khanh Hoa Province, Vietnam. Herpetozoa 37: 379-390, DOI: 10.3897/herpetozoa.37.e137809
