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Afronatrix anoscopus (COPE, 1861)

IUCN Red List - Afronatrix anoscopus - Least Concern, LC

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Higher TaxaColubridae (Natricinae), Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes)
Subspecies 
Common NamesE: African Brown Water Snake 
SynonymTropidonotus anoscopus COPE 1861: 299
Tropidonotus ferox GÜNTHER 1863: 355
? Natrix anoscopus — COPE 1892: 673
? Tropidonotus anoscopus — BOULENGER 1893: 242
Tropidonotus ferox — BOULENGER 1893: 355
Tropidonotus ferox — KAPTOZ 1913: 285
Helicops gendrii BOULENGER 1910: 512
Natrix ferox — BOGERT 1940: 32
Natrix anoscopus anoscopus — LOVERIDGE 1941: 118
Natrix anoscopus gendrii — VILLIERS 1950: 35
Natrix firestonei TAYLOR & WEYER 1958
Natrix anoscopus — MENZIES 1966
Afronatrix anoscopus — ROSSMAN & EBERLE 1977: 42
Natrix anoscopus — HOOGMOED 1980
Afronatrix anoscopus — CHIPPAUX 1999
Afronatrix anoscopus — RÖDEL & MAHSBERG 2000
Afronatrix anoscopus — TRAPE & MANE 2004
Afronatrix anoscopus — TRAPE & BALDÉ 2014
Afronatrix anoscopus — WALLACH et al. 2014: 13
Afronatrix anoscopus — SENTER & CHIPPAUX 2022 
DistributionLiberia, Sierra Leone, S Senegal (HR 26: 156), Ivory Coast, SW Burkina Faso, Guinea (Conakry), Mali, Nigeria, Cameroon, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Equatorial Guinea

Type locality: see comment  
Reproductionoviparous 
TypesHolotype: ANSP 6639 
DiagnosisDiagnosis (genus). A genus of natricine snakes characterized by having: the dorsal scales in 21 rows or more, a single pair of anterior temporals, the anal plate divided, and keeled subcaudals; the palatine with a short spur extending medially toward the vomerine process, and the supratemporal considerably shortened; the hemipenis moderately bilobed with a simple sinistral sulcus and the nude apical area not very extensive. (Rossman & Eberle 1977: 42).


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CommentType locality: Originally (erroneously) reported from Cuba.

Type species: Tropidonotus anoscopus COPE 1861 is the type species of the genus Afronatrix ROSSMAN & EBERLE 1977.

Synonymy: after CHIPPAUX 1999 and J. Hallermann, pers. comm., 19 Sep 2014.

Abundance: “Afronatrix anoscopus is by far the most dominant snake species in the rainforest of southeastern Guinea. At Gborola, a native villager collected 50 specimens within only a few hours in a 100 m section of the Bougolo stream (Trape et al. 2008). The extraordinary high density of A. anoscopus in many West African streams and data on prey items suggest that A. anoscopus is the most important predator of fish in such ecosystems (Trape et al. 2008). A female from Sangalabadou (IRD 4120.G) measured 798 mm total length (snout-vent length: 617 mm), a new record size for this species” (TRAPE & BALDÉ 2014, s. also Böhme 2000).

Distribution: for a map of the genus see Deepak et al. 2021: Fig. 1. For a map with localities in Equatorial Guinea see SÁNCHEZ-VIALAS et al. 2022.

Phylogenetics: for a phylogenetic analysis of Sub-saharan Natricine genera see Deepak et al. 2021. 
References
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  • Böhme, Wolfgang, Mark-Oliver Rödel, Christian Brede & Philipp Wagner 2011. The reptiles (Testudines, Squamata, Crocodylia) of the forested southeast of the Republic Guinea (Guinée forestière), with a country-wide checklist. Bonn zoological Bulletin 60 (1): 35-61 - get paper here
  • Boulenger, G.A. 1893. Catalogue of the snakes in the British Museum (Nat. Hist.) I. London (Taylor & Francis), 448 pp. - get paper here
  • Briscoe, M.S. 1949. Notes on Snakes Collected in Liberia. Copeia 1949 (1): 16-18 - get paper here
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  • Chirio, L. & Lebreton, M. 2007. Atlas des reptiles du Cameroun. MNHN, IRD, Paris 688 pp.
  • CHIRIO, L., & INEICH, I. 2009. Afronatrix anoscopus (Cope, 1861). Afr. Herp News (47): 44-45
  • Cope, E.D. 1861. Contributions to the ophiology of Lower California, Mexico and Central America. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 13: 292-306 - get paper here
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  • Menzies, J.I. 1966. The snakes of Sierra Leone. Copeia 1966 (2): 169-179. - get paper here
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  • TRAPE, JEAN-FRANÇOIS & CELLOU BALDÉ 2014. A checklist of the snake fauna of Guinea, with taxonomic changes in the genera Philothamnus and Dipsadoboa (Colubridae) and a comparison with the snake fauna of some other West African countries. Zootaxa 3900 (3): 301–338 - get paper here
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