Typhlops perimychus, Thomas, Richard & Hedges, Blair, 2007

Thomas, Richard & Hedges, Blair, 2007, Eleven new species of snakes of the genus Typhlops (Serpentes: Typhlopidae) from Hispaniola and Cuba, Zootaxa 1400, pp. 1-26 : 15-19

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.175414

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5677329

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/004FE949-FFBA-FFDE-FF3F-F99FFAEE2068

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Typhlops perimychus
status

sp. nov.

Typhlops perimychus new species ( Figs. 8 View FIGURE 8 E, 9A)

Holotype: USNM 564800 (field tag number 161982), from Blue Beach, U. S. Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, five meters elevation, collected on 22 March 1987 by S. B. Hedges and C. A. Hass.

Paratypes: All from the U. S. Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, Cuba: KU 268435, windward (east) side of Bay, Kittery Beach, 8 Nov. 1968, P. J. Tolson; KU 268655–656, windward side of Bay, 5 April 1969, J. A. Rodgers, A. Schwartz; USNM 192797, nursery, east side of Bay, 9 May 1969, P. J. Tolson; USNM 192802, nursery, east side of Bay, 21 May 1969, P. J. Tolson; USNM 192811, nursery, east side of Bay, 10 July 1969, P. J. Tolson; KU 268657, windward nursery, 1969, P. J. Tolson; KU 269658, windward nursery, 11 Sept. 1969, P. J. Tolson; KU 269659, windward nursery, 6 April 1969, P. J. Tolson; KU 269660, windward nursery, 2 May 1969, P. J. Tolson; KU 269661, windward nursery, 5 May 1969, A. Schwartz; MCZ 68726; MCZ 68944; MCZ 69443; USNM 315999, near grounds of Fil­Am Club, just N Glass Beach; USNM 316000, John Paul Jones Hill on Perimeter Road, 16 August 1988, R. I. Crombie, L. K. Gordon, G. Zustak.

Associated specimen: USNM 317824, Kittery Beach Road, just past Graffiti Hill, R. I Crombie and G. K. Pregill, 9 June 1987.

Diagnosis: A moderately large species of the Typhlops biminiensis Group differing from T. biminiensis in having a rostral with an acuminate posterior edge, not broadly rounded. Also, the rostral has parallel sides and is not indented at the apex of the snout ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). Typhlops perimychus additionally differs from T. biminiensis in having a more protuberant snout (NE) and a larger preocular apical diameter (PD), as noted above ( Figs. 10 View FIGURE 10 A–10C). Diagnostic characters distinguishing this species from the other Cuban species will be discussed below as those species are described. Diagnostic characters distinguishing all Cuban species are presented in Table 2 View TABLE 2. A .

Species1

Character A B C D E F G H Rostral acuminate posteriorly No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 1—A, Typhlops biminiensis ; B, T. perimychus ; C, T. arator ; D, T. anousius ; E, T. notorachius ; F, T. contorhinus ; G, T. anchaurus ; H, T. satelles .

Description: Snout rounded, slightly lobed (truncate­ogival). Rostral varying from broad and rounded, almost circular, to broadly oval in dorsal aspect (RW1/RL1 0.8–1.0); not flared on apex; minimal umbo; no labial flare. Anterior nasal width as a proportion of RW1 0.34–0.39. Preocular angle 104–131°, apex rounded; lower portion contacting labials 2 and 3 of upper labial series. OL 1/2 height, OS 0.14–0.25. Rostronasal pattern strongly divergent. Postocular 4–7 times higher than long. First parietal standard, spanning two scale rows or slightly less. Second parietal present and similar in size to the first or absent (= standard scale). TL to 280 mm (see below). TL/TA 46–85. TL/MBD 41–69. Middorsal scales 453–496. Scale rows 22 with no posterior reduction or 24 reducing to 22 at about midbody. Coloration bicolor (medium to dark brown dorsally) with the transition to an unpigmented venter by both fading and dropping out of pigmented scales anteriorly, with less fading posteriorly, resulting in a jagged transition due to dropping out of pigment posteriorly. Hemipenes attenuate.

Distribution: Known only from the eastern (“windward”) side of the U. S. Naval Station Guantanamo Bay in eastern Cuba ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ).

Etymology: From the Greek, peri (around, near) and mychos (bay) in allusion to the distribution of the species, next to Guantánamo Bay.

Comments: This is the best represented species of the T. biminiensis Group in Cuba. It is unclear why it appears to be so abundant on the U.S. Naval Station while species in this group have been rarely collected elsewhere in Cuba, despite considerable searching. However, most specimens from the base have been collected at the nursery, next to the golf course, where there is abundant moisture and vegetation. We suspect that this artificial habitat has allowed this species to increase locally in numbers. On the other hand, the series of 18 specimens has accumulated over a period of decades from collections made by many persons, and therefore the combined search effort has been great. A single specimen collected at a different location on the base, USNM 317824 (407 mm TL), is the second largest specimen of the genus in the West Indies (see below). It is 45% larger than the next largest specimen (280 mm) of T. perimychus . No tissues are available from this specimen. Although in rostral shape it agrees with other material of T. perimychus , the large size difference makes comparisons of measurements difficult and the possibility exists that it is an undescribed species. For these reasons we have treated it here as an associated specimen.

The next new species having affinities with T. biminiensis occurs in western Cuba. It may be known as

TABLE 2. A summary of variation in selected characters of Typhlops biminiensis and associated species of Cuban blindsnakes.

Rostral umbo No No Yes No No Yes Yes No
Rostral flared on apex No No Yes No No No Yes No
Pigmentation present Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes
Middorsal scales 454–537 453–496 578–579 465–513 475–529 502 514 514–527
Scale rows anterior 22,24 22,24 26 24 24 24 24 22,24
Scale rows posterior 22,24 22 24 22 22 22 22 22
Scale reduction (% TL) 50 50 34–41 2 15–40 31 31 11
ANTNAS/RW1 0.30–0.37 0.34–0.39 0.35 0.40–0.64 0.42–0.53 0.49 0.36 0.32–0.33
SVL (mm) 221–373 128–273 235­450 107–193 277–297 310 235 302–343
TL (mm) 225–380 130–280 240–460 109–197 282–301 316 240 307–350
TA (mm) 2–6 2–6 5–10 2–4 4–5 6 5 5–7
TL/TA 42–60 46–85 46–48 55–56 48–75 53 48 55–61
TL/MBD 39–51 41–59 51–55 45–55 45–57 63 63 62–75
PD 2–20 13–29 21 13–20 21–30 40 18 24–30
RI/RL1 0.19–0.33 0.19–0.49 0.25 0.40–0.41 0.37–0.43 0.68 0.35 0.23–0.27
RW1/RL1 0.81–1.08 0.79–1.05 0.97 0.74–0.77 0.78–0.87 1.03 0.87 0.99
RW2/RW1 0.75–0.94 0.76–1.05 1.04 0.83–0.94 0.91–0.99 0.96 0.92 0.79–0.83
((RW1+RL3)/TL)*100 1.88–2.50 1.80–2.96 2.46 2.11–2.75 1.60–1.80 1.67 2.10 1.58–1.91
Sample size 17 20 3 2 4 1 1 2
USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Squamata

Family

Typhlopidae

Genus

Typhlops

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