Letheobia swahilica (BROADLEY & WALLACH, 2007)
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Higher Taxa | Typhlopidae (Afrotyphlopinae), Typhlopoidea, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Swahili gracile blind-snake |
Synonym | Letheobia swahilica BROADLEY & WALLACH 2007: 46 Typhlops pallidus – (not COPE) STERNFELD 1908: 242 Typhlops pallidus – (not COPE) STERNFELD 1910: 12 (part) Typhlops pallidus – BOULENGER 1915: 616 (part) Typhlops pallidus – LOVERIDGE 1916: 82 (part) Typhlops pallidus – LOVERIDGE 1924: 4 (part) Typhlops pallidus – LOVERIDGE 1936: 227 Typhlops pallidus – WERNER 1921: 330 (part) Typhlops pallidus – LOVERIDGE 1957: 244 (part) Typhlops pallidus – BROADLEY & HOWELL 1991: 21 (part). Rhinotyphlops pallidus – ROUX-ESTÈVE 1974: 217 Rhinotyphlops pallidus – ROUX-ESTÈVE 1975: 445 (part) Rhinotyphlops pallidus – SPAWLS 1978: 2 Rhinotyphlops pallidus – HUGHES 1983: 354 Rhinotyphlops pallidus – BROADLEY & BROADLEY 1996: 45 Rhinotyphlops pallidus – SPAWLS et al. 2002: 295 Rhinotyphlops pallidus – SPAWLS et al. 2006: 92 (part) Letheobia swahilica — HEDGES et al. 2014 Letheobia swahilica — WALLACH et al. 2014: 382 Letheobia swahilica — SPAWLS et al. 2018: 359 Letheobia swahilica — MALONZA 2024 |
Distribution | Kenya, N Tanzania Type locality: from old village of Ngatana, ca. one mile northwest from new village of Wema, in the lower Tana River, Coast Region, Kenya (02°30’S, 40°15’E, elevation 50 m). |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: MCZ 40076, a male collected by A. Loveridge, 14 June 1934. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Closely related to Letheobia pallida, distinguished by its more robust build (length/diameter ratio 49–62 vs 62–82) and fewer middorsals (376–392 vs 418–433). Description: Snout rounded, prominent. Rostral very broad, truncated posteriorly; frontal crescentic; supraocular transverse, its lateral apex between nasal and ocular, the latter separated from the lip by a large subocular; eye usually not visible, but visible beneath the nasal/ocular sulcus in NMZB 14290; nasal suture arising from second labial; SIP X (N1, P, O, O); scale rows 24-22-22; MD 376–392; vertebrae 235–260; MD/ V ratio 1.56–1.62; L/D ratio 49–62. Colourless. Size. Largest specimen (ZMB 25866 – Zanzibar Coast) 190 mm in total length. (BROADLEY & WALLACH 2007: 46) |
Comment | Habitat: Coastal forest and environs. |
Etymology | Named for the Swahili people of the coastal strip opposite Zanzibar Island. |
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