Leptophis haileyi, Murphy, John C., Charles, Stevland P., Lehtinen, Richard M. & Koeller, Krista L., 2013

Murphy, John C., Charles, Stevland P., Lehtinen, Richard M. & Koeller, Krista L., 2013, A molecular and morphological characterization of Oliver’s parrot snake, Leptophis coeruleodorsus (Squamata: Serpentes: Colubridae) with the description of a new species from Tobago, Zootaxa 3718 (6), pp. 561-574 : 569-570

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3718.6.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CC868688-A152-449A-9DDA-7A86AB48DE19

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5611539

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/57428A08-FFBA-4760-E189-52D6B8F55F5A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptophis haileyi
status

sp. nov.

Leptophis haileyi sp. nov. Murphy, Charles, Lehtinen, & Koeller

Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3. A c, d

Holotype. CAS 245313, male, 857 mm SVL, 549 mm tail; collected by P.G. Frank, P.A. Frank, and R. Lawson in 2006 on Tobago near Roxborough at 11º 15′ 05.8″N, 60º 34′ 04.7″W.

Etymology. This species is named in honor of Adrian Hailey, the University of the West Indies for his contributions to the herpetology of Trinidad and Tobago.

Diagnosis. The only Tobago Leptophis to have a subacuminate snout in profile; the rostral barely visible from above; primary temporal in contact with three or four upper labials, including the last; prefrontal long (1.7 x the length of the internasal). Tobago L. coeruleodorsus prefrontal 1.3–1.5x the length of the internasal. All L. coeruleodorsus examined have two upper labials contacting primary temporal with last upper labial excluded from contact with primary temporal. In L. haileyi sp. nov., the last upper labial makes narrow contact with the primary temporal on both sides. L. haileyi sp. nov. has longitudinal dorsolateral stripes on the anterior body scale rows 2–4; nine upper labials, 2–3–4 at the loreal-prefrontal shield, 5–6 in the orbit; 5/4 lower labials at the first pair of chin shields, L. coeruleodorsus on Tobago has eight upper labials with 2–3 contacting the loreal-prefrontal shield, and 4+ 5 in the orbit. This species can also be distinguished from L. coeruleodorsus by its domed snout (prefrontal – internasal area), its relatively high ventral count (173), and proportionally shorter tail. The male holotype has a tail: SVL ratio (0.64) and a subcaudal count (166) that falls within the range of L. coeruleodorsus females.

Description of Holotype: Rostral barely visible from above, broader than tall, separates nasals; internasals, prefrontals quadrangular, prefrontals elongated; frontal pentagonal, slightly constricted in middle, greater in length than the internasal-prefrontal seam and parietal seam; internasal seam about 0.58 of prefrontal seam; parietals broad, contact upper postocular; nasals bordered by rostral anteriorly, the internasals dorsally, loreal-prefrontal shield posteriorly, upper labials one and two ventrally; nares directed laterally located in the center of nasal; preocular contacts loreal-prefrontal shield but not frontal; supraocular slightly shorter than frontal, does not extend past the anterior border of the frontal, posterior edge very round; only upper postocular contacts parietal, lower postocular contacts primary temporal; upper labials nine, first two contact nasal, 3–4 contact loreal-prefrontal shield, 4–5 in orbit, 7–8–9 contact primary temporal on left and 6–7–8–9 contact the primary temporal on right; fifth upper labial tallest, longest is nine; lower labials 10/10, first 5/4 contact first pair of chin shields; dorsal scales 15–15–11 rows; scale rows above second keeled.; ventrals 173, subcaudals 166, tail tip does not appear damaged.

In alcohol first two scale rows at midbody (three scales on anterior body) light cream; next three to four rows solid blue-gray above, most scales in vertebral row same color with an occasional scale bright blue (probably green in life); light coloration of the venter extends onto the chin and upper labials; exception dark blue from face intrudes onto upper portion of first four labials.

Distribution. This species is currently known from a single specimen from the northeast portion of Tobago. Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 shows the vegetation near the type locality for this species, in the vicinity of Roxborough.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Colubridae

Genus

Leptophis

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