Oligodon ocellatus (MORICE, 1875)
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Higher Taxa | Colubridae, Colubrinae, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Ocellated Kukri Snake |
Synonym | Simotes ocellatus MORICE 1875: 57 Simotes brevicauda STEINDACHNER 1867 (not GÜNTHER 1862) Oligodon analepticos CAMPDEN-MAIN 1970 (nom. nov.) Oligodon ocellatus — STUART et al. 2006 Oligodon ocellatus — WALLACH et al. 2014: 501 Oligodon ocellatus — DAVID et al. 2022 |
Distribution | E Cambodia (Kompong Cham), S Vietnam ((Binh Tri Thien, Quang Nam-Da Nang, Dac Lac, Phu Khanh, Lam Dong, Tay Ninh, Dong Nai), 0-300 m elevation, Laos, Thailand (Ubon Ratchathani) Type locality: "Tay-ninh, Cochinchine Française." [=Tay Ninh, Tay Ninh Province, southern Vietnam, 11° 18'N, 106° 06'E]. Terra typica (O. analepticos): “Cochinchina” |
Reproduction | oviparous |
Types | Syntypes: MHNL 1569a-b, 1571, and 1572, two males and two females, 539-663 mm (A. Morice). |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: A species of the genus Oligodon cyclurus-group, characterized by (1) long and deeply forked hemipenes, reaching 15th–17th SC, thin, smooth and not spinose throughout; (2) 19–19–15 (rarely 13) dorsal scale rows; (3) reductions between 19 and 17 rows occurring between VEN 79–107 (mean 90.3); (4) a very short tail, TaL/TL 0.097–0.141; (5) 9–11 maxillary teeth, the last two or three strongly enlarged; (6) anal plate single; (6) head scalation complete, including a presubocular; (7) 8 (rarely 7) supralabials; (9) 2 anterior temporals; and (10) a typically blotched dorsal pattern, with large blotches in most specimens, or sometimes merely a reticulated pattern with very faint blotches (DAVID et al. 2008). Additional details (285 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | CAMPDEN-MAIN 1970 considered Simotes brevicauda STEINDACHNER as a secondary homonym of Oligodon brevicauda GÜNTHER 1862. Thus a new name, Oligodon analepticos was proposed by CAMPDEN-MAIN 1970. Habitat: terrestrial, despite being categorized as “fully arboreal” (by Harrington et al. 2018), probably erroneously following Das 2010 (pers. comm., James Holden via Henrik Bringsøe, 30 Nov 2021). |
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