Toxicocalamus Boulenger, 1896

O’Shea, Mark, Herlihy, Brian, Paivu, Blaise, Parker, Fred, Richards, Stephen J. & Kaiser, Hinrich, 2018, Rediscovery of the rare Star Mountains Worm-eating Snake, Toxicocalamus ernstmayri O’Shea et al., 2015 (Serpentes: Elapidae: Hydrophiinae) with the description of its coloration in life, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 154) 12 (1), pp. 27-34 : 27-32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11385946

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11385968

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2612A441-D673-6248-EEC2-FAA0D80847E9

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Toxicocalamus Boulenger, 1896
status

 

The genus Toxicocalamus Boulenger, 1896 View in CoL View at ENA

currently comprises fifteen taxa (fourteen species and one subspecies) of diurnal, semi-fossorial to terrestrial, secretive, vermivorous elapid snakes that are endemic to the island of New Guinea and nearby islands. Several species are poorly represented in museum collections, and the most recently described species, Toxicocalamus ernstmayri O’Shea et al., 2015 , is one of four species known only from their holotypes, the others being T. grandis ( Boulenger, 1914) , T. mintoni Kraus, 2009 , T. pachysomus Kraus, 2009 , and T. cratermontanus Kraus 2017 . The holotype of T. ernstmayri ( Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, accession number R-145946) is also the largest specimen so far recorded for the genus, with a snout-vent length (SVL) of 1,100 mm, and a total length of 1,200 mm ( O’Shea et al. 2015).

The holotype of Toxicocalamus ernstmayri , an adult female, was collected by one of us (FP) at Wangbin Village in the Star Mountains (5°14’26.72”S, 141°15’31.92”E, elev. 1,468 m), North Fly District , Western Province, Papua New Guinea, on 23 December 1969 GoogleMaps . The snake had been killed by a villager and handed to FP, a kiap 1 patrolling the area. It was originally accessioned into the museum collection as Micropechis ikaheka Lesson, 1830 , due to its superficial resemblance to that taxon.

We here report on the second individual of T. ernstmayri , the first seen and photographed in life. The snake was sighted by one of us (BP) at 0750 hrs on 9 October 2015, as it crawled across an area of active mine workings along the west wall at the Ok Tedi Mine (5°12’53.77”S, 141°08’38.57”E, elev. 1,670 m) approximately 13.2 km WNW of Wangbin, in the North Fly District where the holotype was collected ( Fig. 1 View Fig ) GoogleMaps . It was observed for approximately 20 min and photographed several times.

The snake was not captured and measured, but as it can be seen completely spanning a 747 mm tire track ( Fig. 2A View Fig ) its total length is certainly> 750 mm (estimated as ca. 850 mm). It was observed and photographed as it crossed open ground ( Fig. 2B View Fig ), rubble piles ( Fig. 2C View Fig ), and passed underneath a stationary digger ( Fig. 2D View Fig ), until it disappeared into the vegetation on the steep slope at the top left of Fig. 3 View Fig .

The snake can be identified as a member of the genus Toxicocalamus by the presence of six supralabials and the lack of the temporolabial scale ( Fig. 4 View Fig B’). The only other terrestrial Papuan elapid genus to lack a temporolabial scale is Pseudonaja . An anterior body dorsal scale count of eight, from the vertebral scale row to the lowest dorsal scale row, can also be discerned from the images ( Fig. 4 View Fig C’, D’), indicating an anterior dorsal scale count of 15. There does not appear to be any head scute fusion although this is harder to discern with certainty from the images. The patterning of this snake in life can be seen clearly: it has a yellow body with large grey basal spots on each dorsal scale, and a grey cap to the head. This description agrees very closely with that given by Parker (1982: 55) for the aberrant Micropechis ikaheka , which would become the holotype of Toxicocalamus ernstmayri :

“One snake taken at Wangbin (1500 m above sea level) in the Star Mountains differed so much in colouring from those at Kiunga and Ningerum that it may well represent another species. It was brought in already dead by a Wangbin villager. People there agreed with him that it was extremely rare in the area. The head was black, the lips bright yellow. The body scales were a deep yellow, each having a grey anterior tip. The amount of pigmentation on each scale decreased from the vertebral row towards the outermost laterals, and increased evenly along the body, with the tail darkest. There were no indications of any bars on the body. The ventral surfaces were uniform yellow.”

The characters observed in the photographs of the newly observed individual are clearly diagnostic of T. ernstmayri and allow us to make an unequivocal species determination. The only other genus with which this snake can be confused is Micropechis , which exhibits a temporolabial scale ( Fig. 5 View Fig ). Although entirely yellow specimens of M. ikaheka are known, they are confined to the Vogelkop Peninsula , West Papua Province , western New Guinea; all specimens of M. ikaheka known from PNG are strongly banded on the posterior body. At an SVL> 750 mm total length this individual of T. ernstmayri would appear to be a subadult, as it is considerably shorter than the holotype (SVL 1,200 mm). The encounter with an unusual, “golden” snake at the Ok Tedi Mine was sufficiently noteworthy, even in Papua New Guinea where snake encounters are commonplace, that it was presented in the mine’s own magazine (Ok Tedi Weng magazine, Issue 1, 2017, p. 6).

Topography

The source of the Ok Tedi 2 lies at approximately 2,900 m elevation in the central Star Mountains ( Hyndman and Menzies 1990), just north of the provincial border between Western and Sandaun (formerly West Sepik) Provinces of PNG, and approximately 28 km east of the international border with Papua Province , Indonesian New Guinea. From its source the Upper Ok Tedi flows rapidly south through extremely rugged mountainous terrain to meet the Ok Mani, flowing in from the southern slopes of Mount Fubilan, at an elevation of 400 m, just to the west of Tabubil. The distance travelled from the source of the Ok Tedi to the Ok Mani confluence is only ca. 28.5 river kilometers (23 km in a direct line), but the river has already lost 2,500 m in elevation. The distance from Tabubil to the confluence of the Ok Tedi with the Fly River at d’Albertis Junction 3 is a further 170 river kilometers (100 km in a direct line) with a further drop in elevation to 70 m, from where the Fly meanders first southwest, then southeast to the Gulf of Papua. The town of Kiunga on the Fly River, (upstream by 45 river kilometers, 20 km in a direct line) east of d’Albertis Junction, lies at an elevation of only 20 m, yet it is approximately 375 km from the Fly delta, while the actual distance is closer to 800 river kilometers due to its meandering course across the low-lying flood plains ( Halse et al. 1996).

The Ok Tedi Mine is located on the slopes of Mount Fubilan (2,084 m), “a copper mountain with a gold cap” ( Knox 2013), at an elevation of approximately 1,700 m. It is approximately 12 km northwest of the nearest population center, the town of Tabubil which was established to support the mine, yet the mine lies over 1.2 km higher. Tabubil, located at only 457 m elevation, is approximately 450 km from the coast. The steepness of the southern Star Mountains, rising by 1,200 m in elevation over only 12 km in horizontal distance, contrasts with the almost imperceptible south-north increase in elevation (<500 m over 450 km) of the Trans-Fly Region as a whole.

At 1,700 m elevation, the Ok Tedi Mine is approximately 230 m higher than Wangbin Village (1,468 m elevation), the type locality of T. ernstmayri , suggesting that this snake is probably confined to mid-montane elevations in the Star Mountains. It is unlikely that it occurs as low as Tabubil (elevation <500 m), given the complete lack of any specimens from there despite the largescale development and burgeoning human population (see below). Even within its known range, this relatively large, diurnally-active snake would seem to be rare, as this region has been fairly thoroughly investigated by biologists, including by one of us (SJR), yet no specimens have been collected or reported.

The Vegetation and Climate

Ok Tedi Mine’s elevation is close to the boundary between Lower Montane Rainforest (1,000–1,800 m elevation), and Low-altitude Midmontane Rainforest (1,800–2,200 m elevation), Zones 2 and 3 respectively of Hyndman and Menzies (1990). Lower Montane Rainforest comprises mixed evergreen forest with a 20–30 m tall canopy, dominated by emergent white oak ( Castanopsis acuminatissima ) at tree height of up to 40 m, whereas Low-altitude Midmontane Rainforest is dominated by moss-covered Myrtle ( Syzygium ) and Screw Palm ( Pandanus ) with a 25–30 m canopy height.

Rainfall is high in the Upper Ok Tedi-Mount Fubilan region, with as much as 10,000 mm being recorded annually at the mine ( Hearn 1995), with little seasonal variation, the lowest rainfall averaging 433 mm in November, and the highest averaging 576 mm in June ( Merkel 2017). The area lies in a belt known as the “midaltitude fringe high rainfall zone” ( Hyndman and Menzies 1990), which experiences continual heavy rain, defined as over 50 mm per week ( Brookfield and Hart 1971), although the previous figures amount to 100–140 mm of rainfall per week. Sometimes rainfall is excessive, and on at least four days a year there will be over 100 mm of rainfall over a 24-hour period, and once every 1–3 years rainfall will exceed 150 mm in a single day ( McAlpine et al. 1983). The Upper Ok Tedi-Mount Fubilan region is one of the wettest places, not only on the island of New Guinea but in the world 4.

The almost constant rainfall, and accompanying heavy cloud cover, results in lowered ambient temperatures. Temperatures recorded at several sites, at different elevations from Tabubil to Mount Fubilan, are lower than those expected for central New Guinea ( Hyndman and Menzies 1990). Maximum daily temperatures range from 23.0–24.7 °C, while minimums at night range from 13.8–14.6 °C ( Merkel 2017). The nights above 2,200 m are even colder with lows of 6.4 °C being recorded at Finimterr (2,300 m) ( Hyndman and Menzies 1990), which means temperatures fall by 1 °C with every 200 m increase in elevation. This combination of relatively cold nighttime temperatures, almost continual rain, and dense cloud cover could in part account for the diurnal activity cycle of a relatively large snake species such as T. ernstmayri .

Human Development

Until the late 1960s Tabubil did not exist as a settlement. Shortly after the holotype of T. ernstmayri was collected by FP (late 1969) a small mining camp was established besides an airstrip ( O’Shea et al. 2015: Fig. 9H) by the Kennecott Copper Corporation, who were engaged in the exploratory drilling on Mount Fubilan. Wangbin was a small neighboring hamlet on the edge of Lake Wangbin ( O’Shea et al. 2015: Figs. 9A–C). During 1976–1980 the Anglo-Australian mining company BHP Billiton negotiated with the Government of Papua New Guinea to establish the mining town of Tabubil and they subsequently established Ok Tedi Mining Limited to operate the gold and copper mine.

The population of the Star Mountains Tabubil “census division” increased by 201%, from 556 to 1,676, in the decade 1980–1990 ( Keig 2001), directly as a result of the establishment of the Ok Tedi Mine and the development of Tabubil. Over the same period Keig (2001) reported that the population of Western Province increased from 64,623 to 74,834, which amounts to only a 15.8% population increase overall. Western Province is vast, covering 96,218 km 2 (37,150 sq mi; Blake 1972), and it is PNG’s largest province (by land area), and while a report by the IUCN (1995) gave the population of the province as 110,000, with a very low overall population density of 1.14/km 2, the same report provided a population of 12,000 for Tabubil. This indicates a 716% increase in population size during the years 1990–1995, making Tabubil the largest urban population in the province, exceeding even the 8,490 population of Daru, the provincial capital in the south of the province. The 2011 census (National Statistical Office of Papua New Guinea 2014) provided a provincial population of 201,351 with 10,270 for Tabubil, 631 for Wangbin, and 15,142 for Daru, suggesting a reversal in the relative populations sizes of Tabubil and Daru. Regardless of this apparent decline the population size and development of the Tabubil area during the last 4.5 decades has been substantial. The demographics of the Tabubil population are eclectic with company employees from around the world. However, the population of the Ok Tedi Mine remains relatively small, with employees concentrated within the actual mine compound. The surrounding midmontane rainforest remains thinly populated and under-explored.

Conservation

The incursion of roads into remote rainforest areas could lead to the persecution and disappearance of vulnerable and misunderstood species like snakes. Toxicocalamus ernstmayri has always been an infrequently encountered species, as exemplified by Parker’s (1982) comment above: “ People there agreed with him that it was extremely rare in the area. ” That it is also a diurnal species, of moderately large size, and seemingly relatively slow moving, would suggest that this species could be more vulnerable to persecution than some other taxa. It is therefore especially heartening that this snake was at no time hindered or molested as it crossed the mine workings, and that it was thought interesting and newsworthy enough to be photographed, the images then being circulated to specialists for an identification, and then finally the sighting was featured as a full-page article in the company’s seven-page in-house publication, which finishes with this plea to its readers:

“So should you be fortunate enough to see one of these snakes in the wild, please observe it from a distance and let it go on its way. They are very rare and recorded sightings are even rarer. Like all the wild life in our foot print we should appreciate its diversity, this snake and perhaps there are other animals out there are unique to this part of PNG and the world and should be appreciated and not killed.”

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Squamata

Family

Elapidae

SubFamily

Hydrophiinae

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