Myriopholis braccianii SCORTECCI, 1929
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Higher Taxa | Leptotyphlopidae, Leptotyphlopinae, Myriopholini, Typhlopoidea, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Scortecci’s Blind Snake |
Synonym | Glauconia cairi — FLOWER 1900: 968 (part.) Glauconia braccianii SCORTECCI 1929: 294 Glauconia variabilis SCORTECCI 1929: 295 Glauconia variabilis SCORTECCI 1929: 67 Glauconia fiechteri SCORTECCI 1929: 266 (part.) Leptotyphlops fiechteri — PARKER 1932: 219 Leptotyphlops braccianii — PARKER 1949: 21 Leptotyphlops variabilis — PARKER 1949: 21 Leptotyphlops macrorhynchus — HAHN 1978: 482 Leptotyphlops longicaudus — HAHN 1980: 19 (part.) Leptotyphlops braccianii — BROADLEY & WALLACH 2007: 26 Myriopholis braccianii — ADALSTEINSSON, BRANCH, TRAPE, VITT & HEDGES 2009 Leptotyphlops braccianii — LARGEN & SPAWLS 2010: 427 Myriopholis braccianii — WALLACH et al. 2014: 463 Myriopholis braccianii — SPAWLS et al. 2018: 373 |
Distribution | Eritrea, S Sudan (Jumhūriyyat), Republic of South Sudan (RSS), S/S Ethiopia, S Somalia, Kenya (south to the Tana River), elevation 100-1900 m. Type locality: Adi Ugri, Eritrea (14°53’N, 38°49’E, 1900 m elevation). |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Holotype: MSNM 3351 (Milano, formerly MSNM 1917), collected by G. F. Turati; Scortecci, 1930: 199. Paratype: MSNM (Milano) [variabilis] |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Close to Leptotyphlops cairi, distinguished by its low number of middorsal scales (277–305 vs 322–370), occipitals usually fused (usually separate in L. cairi), small size (largest 144 mm in total length, whereas L. cairi attains a length of 253 mm). Skull with a large frontoparietal foramen like L. cairi. (Broadley & Wallach 2007) Additional details (1692 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Habitat: The type came from Afromontane vegetation in northern Eritrea. Others were from Sahel Acacia wooded grassland in Eritrea and the Upper Nile basin. In the Sudan, Sudanian woodland with abundant Isoberlinia in Equatoria Province, undifferentiated woodland in Darfur Province and western Ethiopia and in Acacia-Commiphora deciduous bushland and thicket in southern Ethiopia. |
Etymology | Named after Luigi Bracciani, an Italian explorer who was on the Corni-Calciati-Bracciani expedition to Eritrea (1922-1923), where he collected the holotype. |
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