Lycodonomorphus mlanjensis LOVERIDGE, 1953
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Higher Taxa | Lamprophiidae, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Mlanje White-bellied Water-Snake |
Synonym | Lycodonomorphus rufulus mlanjensis LOVERIDGE 1953: 253 Lycodonomorphus rufulus mlanjensis — FITZSIMONS 1966 Lycodonomorphus leleupi mlanjensis — MARAIS 2004 Lycodonomorphus mlanjensis — BROADLEY & COTTERILL 2004 Lycodonomorphus mlanjensis — BROADLEY & BLAYLOCK 2013 Lycodonomorphus mlanjensis — WALLACH et al. 2014: 398 Lycodonomorphus mlanjensis — PIETERSEN et al. 2021 |
Distribution | E Zimbabwe, S Mozambique, Malawi Type locality: Ruo River, Mlanje Mountain, Nyasaland [= Malawi]. |
Reproduction | oviparous. |
Types | Holotype: MCZ 51050, an adult male; Collected by Arthur Loveridge, April 1, 1949. Paratypes: MCZ 51049 and a duplicate now in British Museum (N.H.), being two males from a stream near Nswadzi River, Cholo Mountain, Nyasaland. Collected on 16 and 22, April, 1949. Also an adult female (British Museum, No. 34.2.1.27), from Zomba, Nyasaland. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: L. mlanjensis is distinguished from rufulus and all its races except r. leleupi of the Congo, by possessing 21 mid- body scale-rows. From r. leleupi (and laevissimus, of which two individuals with 21 scale-rows have been reported), it is readily distinguished by its immaculate white throat and belly. Diagnosis (original): Though L. r. rufulus is a common South African snake of which many specimens have been collected, only two examples with more than 19 midbody scale-rows have been recorded during the past 125 years. The new form is, therefore, distinguished from all other races of rufulus, except L. r. leleupi Laurent of the Belgian Congo, by its 21 midbody scale-rows, and in addition from r. whytii, the only other race found north of the Zambezi, by its higher number of subcaudals. Its immaculate throat and belly immediately distinguish it from adults of L. r. leleupi and L. laevissimus of South Africa, the only other species in the genus (Loveridge 1953: 253). Description: Loveridge 1953: 254 |
Comment | Diet: frogs, fish Habitat. aquatic, in swamps, pools, and rivers in montane grassland and savanna. |
Etymology | Named after the type locality. |
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