Geophis rhodogaster (COPE, 1868)
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae (Dipsadinae), Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Rosebelly Earth Snake S: Minadora de Vientre Rosado |
Synonym | Colophrys rhodogaster COPE 1868: 130 Geophis rhodogaster — BOCOURT 1883: 531 Geophis chalybaea — GÜNTHER 1893: 87 Catastoma rhodogaster — AMARAL 1929: 192 Geophis rhodogaster — DOWNS 1967: 92 Geophis rhodogaster — PETERS & OREJAS-MIRANDA 1970: 120 Geophis rhodogaster — VILLA et al. 1988 Geophis fulvoguttatus — KÖHLER 1996: 36 (in error) Geophis rhodogaster — WILSON & TOWNSEND 2007: 16 Geophis rhodogaster — WALLACH et al. 2014: 304 |
Distribution | Mexico (Chiapas), Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, 1500-2744 m elevation Type locality: elevated country in the neighborhood of the city of Guatemala. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Lectotype: ANSP 3317, designated by Downs 1967: 93; paralectotypes: ANSP 3316, USNM 12425. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Geophis rhodogaster can be distinguished from G. damiani and G.hoffmanni by having 17 dorsal scale rows (15 dorsal scale rows in the aforementioned species). Geophis rhodogaster is differentiated from the remaining species with 17 dorsal scale rows (G. dunni, G. fulvoguttatus, and G. nephodrymus) by always lacking a supraocular scale and having the frontal contacting the orbit on both sides of the head(supraocular always present on at least one side of the head in G. dunni and G. fulvoguttatus, and always present on both sides or fused to the postocular in G. nephodrymus; frontal not contacting orbit on both sides in all three species). Additional details (54 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Not listed in LINER 1994. Distribution: see map in CANSECO-MÁRQUEZ et al. 2016: 133 (Fig. 1). Günther’s (1893) reports of G. rhodogaster from Costa Rica have been questioned by Taylor (1951) and others. Köhler (1996) gave measurements and scutellation data for a specimen of G. rhodogaster (SMF 77413) under the name G. fulvoguttatus. Not in Yucatan state (Mexico), fide Gonzalez-Sanchez et al. 2017. |
Etymology | Apparently named after Greek rhodon (a rose, hence red) and gaster (belly), in allusion to the reddish venter of the species. |
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