Gongylosoma longicaudus (PETERS, 1871)
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae, Colubrinae, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Peters' Smooth Snake, Long-tailed Ringneck G: Langschwanz-Halsbandnatter |
Synonym | Ablabes longicaudus PETERS 1871: 574 Ablabes longicauda — BOULENGER 1894 Liopeltis longicaudus — BARBOUR 1912 Gongylosoma longicauda — SMITH 1925 Gongylosoma longicauda — SMITH 1930 Ablabes quinquestriatus MÜLLER 1878 Ablabes quinquestriatus — MÜLLER 1882 Diadophis bipunctatus LIDTH DE JEUDE 1890: 184 Diadophis bipunctatus — WERNER 1900 Gongylosoma [longicauda] — LEVITON 1964 Liopeltis longicauda — GRANDISON 1972: 85 Liopeltis longicauda — GRANDISON 1978: 288 Liopeltis longicauda — TWEEDIE 1983 Liopeltis longicauda — MURPHY et al. 1994 Gongylosoma longicauda — DAVID & VOGEL 1996 Liopeltis longicaudus — MANTHEY & GROSSMANN 1997: 361 Gongylosoma longicauda — CHAN-ARD et al. 1999: 33 Gongylosoma longicaudum — MALKMUS et al. 2002 Gongylosoma longicaudum — WALLACH et al. 2014: 313 Gongylosoma longicauda — CHAN-ARD et al. 2015 Gongylosoma longicauda — DE LANG 2017 Gonglyosoma longicauda — SYAFIQ et al. 2023 (in error) |
Distribution | Indonesia (Java, Sumatra); Borneo (Sabah, Sarawak) Malaysia (Malaya and East Malaysia), Thailand (CHAN-ARD et al. 2015, Pauwels & Grismer 2016) Type locality: “Sarawak” |
Reproduction | |
Types | Syntypes: ZMB 7142, MSNG 30385 |
Diagnosis | 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 2506 characters), are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Illustration: in CHAN-ARD et al. 2015, although the drawings of Gongylosoma longicauda and Liopeltis tricolor have been mixed up (fide PAUWELS & GRISMER 2015). |
Etymology | Presumably named after the Latin longus (long) plus cauda (tail), referring to the long tail of the species. Kraus & Fortson 2024 argue that it should remain -caudus as the original description used it as an adjective. |
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