Advanced search
Start date
Betweenand
Related content
(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

REDISCOVERY OF ATRACTUS MICRORHYNCHUS AND REAPPRAISAL OF THE TAXONOMIC STATUS OF A. EMERSONI AND A. NATANS (SERPENTES: DIPSADIDAE)

Full text
Author(s):
Passos, Paulo [1] ; Cisneros-Heredia, Diego [2] ; Rivera, Dani Enrique [3] ; Aguilar, Cesar ; Schargel, Walter E. [4]
Total Authors: 5
Affiliation:
[1] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Dept Vertebrados, Museu Nacl, BR-20940040 Rio De Janeiro, RJ - Brazil
[2] Univ San Francisco Quito, Coll Biol & Environm Sci, Quito - Ecuador
[3] Univ Mayor San Marcos, Museo Hist Nat, Dept Herpetol, Lima - Peru
[4] Univ Texas Arlington, Dept Biol, Arlington, TX 76019 - USA
Total Affiliations: 4
Document type: Journal article
Source: Herpetologica; v. 68, n. 3, p. 375-392, SEP 2012.
Web of Science Citations: 16
Abstract

The species Rhabdosoma microrhynchum (now Atractus microrhynchus) was originally described based on a single specimen collected by the Orton Expedition at ``Guayaquil,{''} in the Guayas province on the Pacific coast of Ecuador. The holotype is currently lost and all specimens previously referred to this species were misidentified on the basis of material from Peruvian Amazonia. While examining museum collections and conducting fieldwork in the Pacific lowlands of Ecuador and Peru, we found specimens assignable to A. microrhynchus. In this study, we report the morphological variation in these new specimens of A. microrhynchus and evaluate the taxonomic status of the Amazonian species previously confused with it. We restrict the concept of A. microrhynchus to the Pacific lowland populations from Ecuador and Peru, and we designate a neotype for the species. Based on the examination of the types of A. emersoni and A. natans Irons Amazonia, we found that there is wide overlap in the internal and external characters of both taxa. Therefore, A. emersoni is relegated to the synonymy of A. natans. Furthermore, we compared A. microrhynchus with all congeners and discuss its affinities with the A. multicinctus species group based on shared, exclusive hemipenial features. (AU)