Mitophis leptepileptus (THOMAS, MCDIARMID & THOMPSON, 1985)
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Higher Taxa | Leptotyphlopidae, Epictinae, Epictini, Typhlopoidea, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: La Selle Threadsnake, Haitian Border Threadsnake |
Synonym | Leptotyphlops leptepileptus THOMAS, MCDIARMID & THOMPSON 1985: 211 Leptotyphlops leptipilepta — SCHWARTZ & HENDERSON 1991: 620 Leptotyphlops leptipileptus — MCDIARMID, CAMPBELL & TOURÉ 1999: 34 Mitophis leptipileptus — ADALSTEINSSON, BRANCH, TRAPE, VITT & HEDGES 2009 Mitophis leptipileptus — WALLACH et al. 2014: 456 Mitophis leptepileptus — HEDGES et al. 2019 Mitophis lepitepileptus — MARTINS et al. 2019 (in error) |
Distribution | Hispaniola (SE Haiti) Type locality: Soliette, 5 km airline NW Fond Verrettes, 366 m, Département de l'Ouest, Haiti. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: USNM 236661, adult female; paratypes: USNM, RT (Richard Thomas private collection), 19 males, 15 females, ASFS, 13 males, 23 females. |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Relatively slender (SVL/MBD 72-94), small-eyed, silvery tan or piebald Leptotyphlops of the bilineatus group having 3 supra- and 3 infralabials, second supralabial in subocular position; high number of middorsal scales (377-414); far posterior reduction from 14 to 12 scale rows (84-95% SVL) by fusion of rows 0 and 1; large, protuberant rostral; slightly decurved snout; triangular supranasal; small, pentagonal ocular; temporal-parietal suture length equal to '/j or less length of parietal-occipital suture; no anal or ventral tubercles; no anal spurs; pelvic vestiges usually absent. (Thomas et al. 1985) 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 107 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | For illustrations see Thomas, McDiarmid, and Thompson, 1985. |
Etymology | Leptepileptus is from the Greek meaning extremely thin, literally "thin-upon-thin.'' |
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