Mussurana bicolor (PERACCA, 1904)
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae (Dipsadinae), Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Two-colored Mussurana Portuguese: Cobra-Coral, Coral, Falsa-Coral, Muçurana, Muçurana-Bicolor |
Synonym | Oxyrhopus bicolor PERACCA 1904: 667 Clelia bicolor — PETERS & OREJAS-MIRANDA 1970 Clelia bicolor — CEI 1993 Clelia bicolor — LEYNAUD & BUCHER 1999: 16 Clelia bicolor — SCROCCHI et al. 2006: 80 Mussurana bicolor — ZAHER et al. 2009 Clelia bicolor — CANO et al. 2015 Mussurana bicolor — WALLACH et al. 2014: 462 Mussurana bicolor — NOGUEIRA et al. 2019 |
Distribution | Brazil (Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul), Paraguay, Argentina (Santa Fe, Chaco, Formosa, Corrientes, Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Misiones [HR 30: 174]), Peru, Bolivia (Beni) Type locality: north of Santa Fé, Buenos Aires, Argentina. |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: MHNG 677.47 |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis (genus): Presence of ontogenetic changes in color pattern; juveniles with a brick red color, a black longitudinal vertebral band, and an uniformly creamish venter. Adults with dorsum entirely black; Hemipenis with a unique row of larger papillae on the internal face of the lobes; postero‐ventral tip of the nasal gland longer than wide; dorsal wall of Duvernoy gland reduced along all its dorsal surface (Zaher, 1994b; 1999). Additional details (1219 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Type species: Oxyrhopus bicolor PERACCA 1904 is the type species of the genus Mussurana ZAHER et al. 2009. |
Etymology | Presumably named after the two color shades in the species, from Latin bi = two, and color. However, “bicolor” may refer to light and dark patches, the dorsal and ventral color, or the dark dorsal head coloration and the lighter supralabials. The genus was named after Mosu‐ (indigenous Tupi, “eel”) + Rana (indigenous Tupi, “like or false”), gender feminine (Amaral, 1974). Mussurana or Muçurana is a very common name in Latin America, applied mostly to the dark adults of pseudoboine snakes. |
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