Title
A new species of pitviper of the genus Bothrops (Serpentes: Viperidae: Crotalinae) from the Central Andes of South America
Date Issued
13 August 2019
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Timms J.
Salazar-Valenzuela D.
Scrocchi G.
Cuevas J.
Leynaud G.
Carrasco P.A.
Publisher(s)
Magnolia Press
Abstract
We describe a new species of montane pitviper of the genus Bothrops from the Cordillera Oriental of the Central Andes, distributed from southern Peru to central Bolivia. The new species can be distinguished from its congeners by the characteristic combination of a dorsal body color pattern consisting of triangular or subtriangular dark brown dorsal blotches, paired dark brown parallel occipital stripes, a conspicuous dark brown postocular stripe, the presence of canthorostrals in some specimens, prelacunal fused or partially fused with second supralabial, one scale usually separating internasals, rostral trapezoidal, two canthals oval to rounded, similar size or slightly larger than internasals, three or four medial intercanthals, eight to twelve intersupraoculars, intercanthals and intersupraoculars keeled and frequently slightly keeled, supraoculars oval, one to three suboculars, two to three postoculars, loreal subtriangular, two to six prefoveals, subfoveals absent, two or none postfoveals, one or two scales between suboculars and fourth supralabial, seven or eight supralabials, nine or eleven infralabials, 23-25 middorsal scales, 189-195 ventrals in females and 182-190 in males, 48-58 subcaudals in females and 54-63 in males, exceptionally undivided. The new species is apparently restricted to areas within Andean montane forests that are less humid and devoid of large trees.
Start page
99
End page
120
Volume
4656
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85070918350
PubMed ID
Source
Zootaxa
ISSN of the container
11755326
Source funding
CONCYTEC-FONDECYT
Sponsor(s)
We thank all the local people at El Palmar, Cuevas who helped finding some of the snakes studied in the present work, their goodness and hospitality is unprecedented: C. Soliz Mancilla, I. Soliz Mancilla, C. Soliz Mancilla, C. Soliz Mancilla, F. Guzmán Soliz, M. Guzmán Soliz, E. Vargas Soliz, D. Sansuste Mérida, B. Sansuste González, C. González Rodríguez, I. Arancibia Solar, M. Pérez Mariscal, L. Lijerón Montenegro, C. Lijerón Montenegro, J. Franco Guzmán, D. Coca Ortiz, E. Ligerón Yepez and M. Rojas. We also thank V. Perezagua for being a great camera man in one of the field trips in Bolivia. JCC is grateful to A. Quiroz for sharing fieldwork in Puno Department, and to APECO and Koepcke scholarships for financing field work. PJV is indebted with M. Lundberg for sharing his photographs and specimens’ data of Instituto Nacional de Salud. PAC is grateful to D. Rodríguez for generously sharing field data and photographs on one of the specimens of the type series that he collected. For allowing examinations of preserved specimens in Bolivian and Peruvian herpetological collections we thank J. Aparicio (CBF), A. Muñoz (MHNC), L. González (MNK), and J. C. Cusi (MUSM). We are grateful to P. Passos and W. Wüster for their useful comments and suggestions on the manuscript. We are indebted to the Willi Hennig Society for making the TNT program freely available (accessible at ww.lillo.org.ar/phylogeny/tnt/). This study was partially supported by the Programa de Cooperación Científico-Tecnológica entre el Consejo Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e In-novación Tecnológica de Perú (CONCYTEC-FONDECYT CS-031-2014) y el Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Productiva de Argentina (MINCYT PE/13/06), and by the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientí-ficas y Técnicas (CONICET-PIP 11220150100788), Argentina. Instituto Nacional del Cáncer INC.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus