Naja nigricollis Reinhardt, 1843

Ineich, Ivan, LeBreton, Matthew, Lhermitte-Vallarino, Nathaly, Abstract. - The, Laurent Chirio, Oku, Mount & Highlands, Bamenda, 2015, The reptiles of the summits of Mont Oku and the Bamenda Highlands, Cameroon *, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 108) 9 (2), pp. 15-38 : 29

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13270281

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DAE649-EF00-9503-FF3D-FB86C716F819

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Naja nigricollis Reinhardt, 1843
status

 

Naja nigricollis Reinhardt, 1843 View in CoL (one specimen)

Material: CamHerp 1500C ( Jakiri village along the road from Bamenda to Nkambe, 6.055°N and 10.658°E, elev. 1,550 m, coll. CamHerp M. LeBreton, July 8, 2002) GoogleMaps .

This spitting cobra species seems not to exceed 1,000 m elevation in East Africa where another related species, Naja ashei Wüster and Broadley, 2007 , can occur above 1,750 m ( Largen and Spawls 2010). Naja nigricollis is found between 20 and 1,800 m elevation in Cameroon.

Lamprophiidae Fitzinger, 1843

The validity of this family was recently demonstrated by Kelly et al. (2011). This work showed that the genus Lamprophis was polyphyletic. A new genus was created and other species previously included in the genus Lamprophis were divided into three groups: (1) virgatus and fuliginosus , together with lineatus and olivaceus were transferred to the revalidated genus Boaedon A.M.C. Duméril, Bibron, and A.H.A. Duméril, 1854 ; (2) Lycodonomorphus was nestled within Lamprophis sensu lato and a sister taxon of Lamprophis inornatus –the latter species was therefore transferred to the genus Lycodonomorphus ; (3) Lamprophis sensu stricto was restricted to a small clade of four species endemic to South Africa, with Lamprophis aurora as type species. We follow this revised taxonomy here.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Squamata

Family

Elapidae

Genus

Naja

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