Gyiophis maculosus (BLANFORD, 1881)
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Higher Taxa | Homalopsidae, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Blanford’s Mud Snake, Blanford's Spotted Water Snake |
Synonym | Hypsirhina maculata BLANFORD 1879: 130 (non DUMÉRIL & BIBRON) Hypsirhina maculosa BLANFORD 1881: 226 (subst. name for maculata) Hypsirhina blanfordi BOULENGER 1890 (fide SMITH 1943) Enhydris maculosa — SMITH 1943: 387 Enhydris maculosa — MURPHY 2007: 138 Enhydris maculosa — WALLACH et al. 2014: 272 Gyiophis maculosa — MURPHY & VORIS 2014: 21 Gyiophis maculosus — REPTILE DATABASE 2020 |
Distribution | Myanmar (= Burma: Irrawaddy River Delta), Indonesia (Nias) Type locality: ‘Pegu (probably in the neighbourhood of Bassein)’ (= Bago, in southern Myanmar). |
Reproduction | ovovivparous |
Types | Neotype: BMNH 1913.6.12.1 (designated by MURPHY 2007: 282) Holotype: ZSI 8207 (but not located by Das et al. 1998). |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (genus): Small to medium sized, with the combination of smooth scales, nasals in contact, 25 scale rows at mid-body, first three upper labials contact loreal, fourth upper labial in orbit. May be most easily confused with the snake formerly known as Enhydris pahangensis Tweedie, which has 25 dorsal scales rows, but has the first upper labial excluded from loreal (MURPHY & VORIS 2014: 21). Additional details (266 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Distribution: reports from China are erroneus (J. Murphy, pers. comm. 23 June 2011). Synonymy: Boulenger 1890 was apparently unaware of the replacement name that Blanford himself had suggested in 1881 and suggested another replacement name, Hypsirhina blanfordi. Type species: Hypsirhina maculosa BLANFORD 1881 is the type species of the genus Gyiophis MURPHY & VORIS 2014: 21. |
Etymology | Named after Latin macula = spot, or Latin maculatus, maculosus = spotted. The genus has been named in honor of Ko Ko Gyi, the Burmese herpetologist who revised the homalopsids. Murphy & Voris 2014 claimed (erroneously) that the gender of the genus is feminine. It’s actually masculine, like all other genera ending in -ophis. |
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