Amerotyphlops stadelmani (SCHMIDT, 1936)
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Higher Taxa | Typhlopidae (Typhlopinae), Typhlopoidea, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Stadelman's Worm Snake |
Synonym | Typhlops stadelmani SCHMIDT 1936: 48 Typhlops stadelmani — MCCRANIE & WILSON 2001 Amerotyphlops stadelmani — HEDGES et al. 2014 Typhlops stadelmani — WALLACH et al. 2014: 771 |
Distribution | Honduras; elevation: 850-1370 m Type locality: “Subirana Valley, 2800 feet altitude, Yoro, Honduras.” |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: MCZ R38701. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis. “Typhlops stadelmani can be distinguished from all other Honduran snakes, except for the other blindsnakes (Anomalepis mexicanus, Epictia ater, E. magnamaculata, Ramphotyphlops braminus, Typhlops costaricensis, and T. tycherus), by having similarly-sized scales completely around the body and a tiny eye located beneath an ocu lar scale. Anomalepis mexicanus has 22-24 scales around the body and the prefrontal and supranasal scales not fused with each other (versus 20 scales around body and prefrontal and supranasal scales fused in T. stadelmani). The species of Epictia have 14 scales around the body and the infranasals and oculars bordering the lip line (versus 20 scales around body and infranasals and oculars separated from lip line by supralabials in T. stadelmani). Ramphotyphlops braminus has brown to black dorsal and ventral surfaces (versus pink dorsal and ventral surfaces in T. stadelmani). Typhlops costaricensis has dark brown dorsal and ventral surfaces and T. tycherus has 22 scales around the body and a dark brown dorsal surface, (versus pink dorsal and ventral surfaces and 20 scales around body and in T. stadelmani).” (McCranie 2011: 56) Additional details (40 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Placed in synonymy of T. tenuis by Dixon and Hendricks (1979:28). MCCRANIE & WILSON 2001 removed T. stadelmani from the synonymy of T. tenuis. Relative abundance in Honduras: rare |
Etymology | Named after the collector of the types, Raymond Stadelman. For biographical notes see Brown 2021. |
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