Chironius maculoventris DIXON, WIEST & CEI, 1993
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae, Colubrinae, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Central Sipo sexcarinatus: Wagler's Puffing Snake Portuguese: Cobra-Cipó |
Synonym | Chironius quadricarinatus maculoventris WIEST 1978 Chironius quadricarinatus maculoventris DIXON, WIEST & CEI 1993: 181 Chironius bicarinatus — PETERS & OREJAS-MIRANDA 1970 (part.) Chironius quadricarinatus maculoventris DIXON, WIEST & CEI 1993: 181 Chironius maculoventris — HOLLIS 2006 Chironius quadricarinatus maculoventris — SCROCCHI et al. 2006: 78 Chironius maculoventris — WALLACH et al. 2014: 161 Chironius quadricarinatus maculoventris — CANO et al. 2015 Chironius maculoventris — TORRES-CARVAJAL et al. 2018 Chironius maculoventris — NOGUEIRA et al. 2019 Chironius maculoventris — BERNAL & DUBOIS 2023 |
Distribution | NE Argentina (Corrientes, Chaco, Formosa, Santa Fe), W Paraguay (Chaco forests and associated vegetation), Bolivia (Tarija; elevation 440 m, EMBERT 2002), Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul) Type locality: Corrientes province, Argentina. |
Reproduction | oviparous. |
Types | Holotype: ZMUC (was UZMK) 60816 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: brown speckling on yellow·olive ventrals and a bold or darkened postocular stripe versus immaculale yellow ventrals and no noticeable postocular stripe in the nominate form [DIXON, WIEST & CEI 1993: 182] Unfortunately we had to temporarily remove additional information as this was scraped by multiple AI companies who sell that data to their customers. These details, e.g. detailed descriptions or comparisons (about 280 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Synonymy that of PETERS & OREJAS-MIRANDA 1970 and CEI 1993. GIRAUDO & SCROCCHI 2002, following DIXON et al. 1993, state that old material identified as Herpetodryas sexcarinatus is actually Chironius quadricarinatus maculoventris and thus this species does not occur in Argentina. Wiest published the description of C. dixoni in his PhD thesis, which was later published again in slighly modified form by Dixon et al. 1993. Entiauspe-Neto & Loebmann 2019 argued that Wiest 1978 constitutes a proper publication and thus has priority over Dixon et al. 1993. Habitat: partly arboreal (Harrington et al. 2018). |
Etymology | Named after Latin: macula, ‘patch, spot’ and venter, ‘belly’. |
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