Dendrelaphis fuliginosus Griffin, 1909
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3272.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6318683 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03957953-1E15-8F4A-2E86-FEFEDE88FEB5 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Dendrelaphis fuliginosus Griffin, 1909 |
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Dendrelaphis fuliginosus Griffin, 1909
Figs. 7 View FIGURE 7 , 8 View FIGURE 8 .
Description. A species of the Dendrelaphis caudolineatus group, characterized by the combination of 1) absence of black longitudinal stripes; 2) absence of a pale ventrolateral line; 3) postocular stripe absent, rarely rudimentarily present; 4) an orange stripe on the neck is absent in live specimens ( Taylor, 1922; Gaulke, 1994); 5) 173–175 ventrals (males), 175–182 ventrals (females); 6) 97–114 subcaudals; 7) relative tail-length 0.255–0.285; 8) 5–7 temporal scales on each side; 9) 9–11 infralabials on each side; 10) 2–5 scales touching the posterior borders of the parietal scales; 11) maximum total length males 97.0 cm, females 130.5 cm.
Description of the neotype. FMNH 67409, subadult male from Negros collected by D. S. Rabor ; SVL 56.5 cm; TAIL 21.5 cm; 173 ventral scales; 108 subcaudal scales; anal shield divided; dorsal scales in 13-13-11 rows; 9 supralabials, supralabials 5 and 6 touch the eye; 10 infralalabials, infralabials 6 and 7 touch the first sublabial; infralabials 1–5 touch first chinshield, infralabials 5,6 touch second chinshield; 2 postoculars; temporal formula 2:2:1/1:2:2; vertebral scales not enlarged; eye-diameter 4.0 mm/ 3.9 mm; eye-nostril distance 3.7 mm / 3.7 mm; snout-width 4.2 mm; posterior edge of the parietal scales touched by 5 scales; head-length 23 mm; ground-color olive-brown; supralabials, chin and throat light-yellow; venter yellowish; very faint temporal stripe; no black stripes; no pale ventrolateral line; thin black stripe on underside of tail.
Sexual dimorphism. Females appear to have slightly larger eyes than males on average (F = 6.5; df = 1; p = 0.04). Females grow larger than males (see description).
Distribution. Dendrelaphis fuliginosus inhabits the Philippine islands Mindoro, Negros, Panay and Masbate.
FMNH |
Field Museum of Natural History |
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.
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