Dendrophidion vinitor

Barragán-Vázquez, Rosario, Ríos-Rodas, Liliana, Fucsko, Lydia Allison, Porras, Louis W., Mata-Silva, Vicente, Rocha, Arturo, DeSantis, Dominic L., García-Padilla, Elí, Johnson, Jerry D. & Wilson, Larry David, 2022, The herpetofauna of Tabasco, Mexico: composition, distribution, and conservation status, Amphibian & Reptile Conservation (e 315) 16 (2), pp. 1-61 : 9-15

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13269959

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E687B9-FF92-EE68-C225-EDA5FEEAF8F3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dendrophidion vinitor
status

 

Dendrophidion vinitor View in CoL 4

Ficimia publia 4

Phrynonax poecilonotus 6

Senticolis triaspis 7

Stenorrhina freminvillii 4

Tantilla rubra 4

Tantilla schistosa 4

Tantillita lintoni 4

Adelphicos quadrivirgatum 4

Amastridium sapperi 4

Coniophanes piceivittis 4

Dipsas brevifacies 4

Geophis carinosus 4

Geophis laticinctus *

Geophis sanniolus 4

Leptodeira maculata 4

Leptodeira septentrionalis 4

Ninia diademata 4

Oxyrhopus petolarius 6

Rhadinaea decorata 6

Sibon dimidiatus 4

Sibon nebulatus 6

Xenodon rabdocephalus 6

Micrurus elegans 4

Scaphiodontophis annulatus 4

Amerotyphlops tenuis 4

Bothriechis schlegelii 6

No. 5. Exerodonta bivocata (Duellman and Hoyt, 1961) . The Chiapan Highlands Treefrog is distributed along the Atlantic slopes of extreme southwestern Tabasco, Oaxaca, and Chiapas in southern Mexico (https://amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org/). This individual was located in Ejido Villa Guadalupe, in the municipality of Huimanguillo , Tabasco. Wilson et al. (2013b) assessed its EVS as 15, placing it in the lower portion of the high vulnerability category. Its conservation status has been judged as Endangered ( EN) by the IUCN, but this species is not listed by SEMARNAT. Photo by Liliana Ríos-Rodas .

No. 7. Quilticohyla zoque (Canseco-Márquez, Aguilar-López, Luría-Manzano, Pineda-Arredondo, and Caviedes-Solis, 2017) . The Zoque Treefrog is distributed in evergreen tropical forest at three localities in southern Mexico in the Selva Zoque, two in southern Veracruz (Paso del Moral and Arroyo Zarco ), one in extreme southwestern Tabasco near the Veracruz and Chiapas borders, and one in northeastern Oaxaca ( Chalchijapa ) (https:// amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org/). This individual was located in Ejido Villa Guadalupe, in the municipality of Huimanguillo , Tabasco. Torres-Hernández et al. (2021) assessed its EVS as 14, placing it at the lower limit of the high vulnerability category. Its conservation status has been judged as Endangered ( EN) by the IUCN, but this species is not listed by SEMARNAT. Photo by Liliana Ríos-Rodas .

No. 6. Ptychohyla macrotympanum (Tanner, 1957) . The Pine Forest Stream Frog is distributed in humid montane and pineoak forest, on the northern slopes of the Chiapan Highlands of Tabasco and Chiapas in Mexico (https://amphibiansoftheworld. amnh.org/). This individual was found in the Ejido Villa Guadalupe of Huimanguillo, Tabasco. Wilson et al. (2013b) assessed its EVS as 11, placing it in the lower portion of the medium vulnerability category. Its conservation status has been considered as Vulnerable (VU) by the IUCN, but this species is not listed by SEMARNAT. Photo by Jenny del Carmen Estrada-Montiel.

No. 8. Triprion spinosus (Steindachner, 1864) . The Coronated Treefrog occurs in humid forests, primarily in the premontane zone of eastern Mexico in the states of Tabasco, Veracruz, Puebla, Oaxaca, and Chiapas, and on into Central America south into Panama (https://amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org/). This individual is from Cerro El Madrigal, in the municipality of Teapa, Tabasco. Wilson et al. (2013b) calculated its EVS as 10, placing it in the lower portion of the medium vulnerability category. Its conservation status has been considered as Near Threatened (NT) by IUCN, but this species is not listed by SEMARNAT. Photo by Marco Antonio Torrez-Pérez .

* = country endemic; ** = non-native.

Thirteen of these 50 species (26.0%) are country endemics and 37 (74.0%) are non-endemics. Thirty of the 37 non-endemics (81.1%) are MXCA species, and thus are distributed some distance from Mexico into Central America. Six of these non-endemics (16.2%) are MXSA species, and thus range from Mexico through Central America and into South America. Finally, one non-endemic (2.7%) is a USCA species, and thus ranges from the United States to Central America.

The 11 single-region species in the GCP ( Table 7) are as follows (numbers refer to the distributional categories as designated by Wilson et al. [2017]; one asterisk indicates a country endemic species; and two asterisks a non-native species):

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Squamata

Family

Colubridae

Genus

Dendrophidion

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