Eryx jaculus (Daudin, 1803)

Ma‛ayan Lev, Dani Nadel, Mina Weinstein-Evron & Reuven Yeshurun, 2022, Squamates and amphibians from the Natufian cemetery of Raqefet Cave, Israel: taphonomy, paleoenvironments and paleoclimate, An International Journal of Paleobiology 34 (12), pp. 2394-2414 : 2404

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/08912963.2021.2017918

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7542128

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BD87E0-FFB5-402F-6E07-C744B185140C

treatment provided by

Julia

scientific name

Eryx jaculus (Daudin, 1803)
status

 

Eryx jaculus (Daudin, 1803)

The Javeline Sand Boa was identified by two trunk vertebrae ( Figure 6 View Figure 6 (a)). Both vertebrae are short and small (maximum centrum length <3 mm). The cotyle and condyle are oval and slightly flattened dorsoventrally. In the dorsal view, the vertebra is wider than long, and the interzygapophyseal constriction is strong. The neural spine extends just posterior to the zygosphene. The zygosphene is wide and only slightly concave anteriorly. The prezygapophyseal articular facets are oval. In ventral view, the centrum is short, wide and convex. The haemal keel is wide, with weakly defined lateral margins, and it extends from the ventral end of the cotyle to the condyle. Due to the state of vertebrae preservation, the diapophysis and parapophysis are broken. In anterior view, the prezygapophyses are short, pointed and dorsolaterally tilted. The neural canal is wide; the anterior margins of the pedicels are concave. The zygosphene is wide and is concave anteriorly. In posterior view, the neural canal is wide, the neural arch is round and its posterior edge is U-shaped. The postzygapophyses are dorsally tilted. In lateral view, the neural spin starts to rise dorsally at the anterior edge, however it is too broken for further description.

The species inhabits the Mediterranean region, semi-arid/arid habitats of the northern Negev and was also documented in the mountain open forest of Mount Hermon; however, it is most common in the Mediterranean and semi-arid/arid alluvial valleys and the coastal plain (supplementary Figure S2 View Figure 2 (e)). This species is not well documented in the Epipaleolithic sites of Israel but was found in EWT ( Lev et al. 2020).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Boidae

Genus

Eryx

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF