Geophis chalybeus (WAGLER, 1830)
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae (Dipsadinae), Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Veracruz Earth Snake S: Minadora de Veracruz |
Synonym | Catostoma chalybaeum WAGLER 1830: 194 Geophis chalybeus WAGLER 1830: 342 R(habdosoma) guttulatum COPE 1885: 385 (fide SMITH 1941) E(lapoidis) chalybaeus — COPE 1885: 386 Geophis chalybaea — GÜNTHER 1893: 87 Geophis bicolor — GÜNTHER 1893: 91 Dirosema bicolor — BOULENGER, 1894: 298 Atractus chalybaeus — COPE 1900: 1232 Catasoma bicolor — AMARAL 1929: 191 Catostoma chalybaeum — AMARAL 1929: 191 Catostoma chalybeum — SLEVIN 1939: 404 Geophis chalybeus — LINER 1994 Geophis chalybeus — WILSON & TOWNSEND 2007: 7 Geophis chalybeus — WALLACH et al. 2014: 301 |
Distribution | Mexico (Veracruz [HR 31: 185]), elevation ca. 1150 m. Type locality: “Mexico.” The type locality of R. guttulatum Cope is “Vera Cruz.” |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: lost, was ZSM 1940/0, sex unknown, from "Mexiko", collector and date unknown, prior to 1858; Holotype said to be unknown fide Downs 1967: 36–40) but see Franzen & Glaw 2007 for a discussion of uncertainties regarding types. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Downs 1967: 58 Additional details (27 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Type species: Catostoma chalybaeum WAGLER 1830 is the type species of the genus Geophis WAGLER 1830. Synonymy after WILSON & TOWNSEND 2007. The name Catostoma Wagler 1830 was first used for this genus, but was quickly substituted with the name Geophis by Wagler (1830) in the same work, in order to avoid confusion with the fish genus Catostomus Lesueur 1817. Smith et al. (1990) further clarified the nomenclatural priority of the name Geophis over Catostoma. Key: Wilson 2007 provided a key to the species; an older key was presented by Downs 1967. |
Etymology | Named after Greek chalybeis (χαλυβηΐς), of steel or iron. [“...Notaeo atro - chalybaeo...”]. The genus was apparently named after Greek gea (from γῆ, γῆς), earth, land + Greek ophis (ὄφῖς), a serpent, snake. |
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