Lampropeltis webbi BRYSON, DIXON & LAZCANO, 2005
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae, Colubrinae, Lampropeltini, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Webb’s kingsnake G: Webbs Königsnatter |
Synonym | Lampropeltis webbi BRYSON, DIXON & LAZCANO 2005 Lampropeltis webbi — WALLACH et al. 2014: 360 Lampropeltis webbi — HANSEN & SALMON 2017 |
Distribution | Mexico (Pacific versant of the Sierra Madre Occidental in Mixed Boreal-Tropical habitat near the Durango/Sinaloa state border) Type locality: 4.0 km west of El Palmito on Hwy. 40, Municipio Concordia, Sinaloa, México (23° 33’ 14.2’’ N, 105° 50’ 47.2’’ W), 2000 m elevation. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: UANL 5684 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: A species of tricolored kingsnake most closely resembling Lampropeltis pyromelana and Lampropeltis mexicana but differing from those species in a number of characters. Lampropeltis webbi can be distinguished from L. pyromelana based on a primarily black snout, the smaller number of white annuli, and a different head pattern. It differs from L. mexicana in having a higher number of ventral and subcaudal scales and in having a different body pattern. In addition, L. webbi is distinguished from L. pyromelana and L. mexicana and all other members of this genus, by mitochondrial DNA markers. The following combination of nucleotide states within the ND4-Leu gene region is diagnostic for L. webbi in our analysis. The numbers refer to the positions within the aligned sequences referenced in Appendix 1; position 1 corresponds to position 11703 of the complete Dinodon semicarinatus mitochondrial genome (GenBank accession number NC 001945). [from BRYSON et al. 2005] Additional details (511 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Note that the diagnosis of this species is fairly vague. Distribution: see map in HANSEN & SALMON 2017: 722 (Fig. 17). |
Etymology | Named after Robert G. Webb (1927-2018) for his countless hours of research on the herpetofauna of northwestern México. See Greenbaum & Zhuang 2019 for an obituary. |
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