Boiga barnesii ( Günther, 1869 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.3.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0B6F641C-424E-4042-A9B6-A130C58935AB |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3851850 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CB8788-EB2E-FFF8-FF04-7E98FBEA3DCF |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Boiga barnesii ( Günther, 1869 ) |
status |
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Boiga barnesii ( Günther, 1869)
( Tables 3–4; Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 , 9E View FIGURE 9 )
Dipsadomorphus barnesii — Boulenger 1896; Wall 1921
Boiga barnesi — Smith 1943; Samarawickrama et al. 2005
Boiga barnesii — Das & De Silva 2005; Somaweera 2006
Specimens examined. Males (n=2). Holotype (by monotypy): Sri Lanka. BMNH 69.7 .24.11, a male from Ceylon.
Other specimen: NMW 25360, a male also from Ceylon .
Etymology. Patronym named after Richard Hawkswoth Barnes who collected the holotype in Ceylon.
Diagnosis. A species of Boiga endemic to Sri Lanka, having 19 midbody scale rows (vs. 21–23 in B. nuchalis , B. dightoni , B. andamanensis ); preoculars 3 on each side of head (vs. preocular 1 in all South Asian congeners); 3 rd supraocular not touching the eye (vs. touching the eye in all other South Asian congeners); vertebral scale row feebly enlarged (vs. strongly enlarged in B. andamanensis , B. ceylonensis , B. beddomei , B. thackerayi ); series of large oblong blotched pattern dorsally (vs. cross bars dorsally in B. ceylonensis ); ventrolateral region with distinct white and black adjacent blotches (vs. such pattern absent in all South Asian congeners except B. thackerayi ).
Redescription of the holotype. A small-sized snake reaching 572 mm total length, with slender habitus, thin neck, wide head; long tail (relative tail length 22.6%); 19–19–14 dorsal scale rows; rostral visible from above; preoculars 3 on each side of head; postoculars 2; loreal 1; supralabials 8, with 4 th, 5 th touching eye; infralabials 10/9, with 1–4 touching chin shields; temporals 10; preventral 2; ventrals 217, angulate laterally; cloacal 1; subcaudals 96 pairs. Dorsum dark greyish-brown, with 47 (32 on body, 15 on tail) blackish-brown, oblong blotches; interspaces often with sparse dark dots; a large dark wash covering the entire top aspect of head from rostrum to occiput; very broad postocular stripe up to jaw angle; labials, chin and venter ashy white, getting darker posteriorly; underside finely spotted with darker hue; venter edged along both sides with a series of large adjacent white and black blotches, alternating at an interval of every 3–4 ventrals.
Variation. Other specimens agreeing with holotype in most aspects; our second male examined show the following variation: snout to vent length 444 mm; tail length 123 mm; relative tail length 22.9%; posterior scale rows 13; temporals 19; ventrals 218; subcaudals 100 pairs; number of cross bars 66 on body.
Distribution and natural history. This species is endemic to Sri Lanka ( Das & De Silva 2005) (Fig. 13). It is restricted to the wet forest zones in the hilly, central and southwestern provinces of the island ( Somaweera 2006). Definite records of this species are from near Kandy ( Samarawickrama et al. 2005).
NMW |
Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien |
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.