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Tantilla slavensi PÉREZ-HIGAREDA, SMITH & SMITH, 1985

IUCN Red List - Tantilla slavensi - Data Deficient, DD

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Higher TaxaColubridae, Colubrinae, Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes)
Subspecies 
Common NamesE: Slavens' Centipede Snake
S: Culebra Centipedívora de Slavens 
SynonymTantilla slavensi PÉREZ-HIGAREDA, SMITH & SMITH 1985
Tantilla slavensi — LINER 1994
Tantilla slavensi — LINER 2007
Tantilla slavensi — WILSON & MATA-SILVA 2014: 54
Tantilla slavensi — WALLACH et al. 2014: 706 
DistributionMexico (SE Veracruz), 50-800 m elevation

Type locality: Cerro Chochobi, elevation 800 m. El Acuyal area, 8 km NW Catemaco, Veracruz, Mexico.  
Reproductionoviparous 
TypesHolotype: CAR-EBTT (= IBH-LT = UNAM-LT) 1668 (Herpetological collection of the Estación Biolgia Tropical "Los Tuxtlas," Univ. Nac. Autónoma Mexico), adult female, collected 17 April 1983 by Gonzalo Perez-Higareda. 
DiagnosisDiagnosis (n=2): Lateral light stripe on scale rows 3 and 4; middorsal light line confined to vertebral scale row; lower third of first scale row mostly light, upper two-thirds uniformly dark, at midbody; light collar complete laterally but interrupted medially; lateral area, between lateral light line and ventral color, all densely pigmented; medial edge of lateral light line also densely pigmented; other areas on dorsum lightly pigmented; 159 ventrals, 56 subcaudals. Description of Holotype (Figs. 1, 2).-Dorsal scale rows 15 throughout body, smooth, lacking apical pits; anal divided; total length 346 mm, tail 69 mm. Dorsal head scales normal; nasal completely divided, suture of postseminasal with internasal subequal to that with prefrontal; latter narrowly contacting 2nd supralabial, separating nasal and preocular; two postoculars; temporals 1-1; supralabials 7-7, 3 and 4 contacting eye, 7th largest; infralabials 6-6, members of anterior pair in narrow medial contact, four contacting anterior chinshields, one (4th) contacting posterior chinshields, 4th largest; posterior chinshields in medial contact, about two-thirds size of anterior chinshields. Head mostly dark brown, darker on sides; upper edge of rostral and edges of adjacent scales light; a light preocular area involving all of 1st supralabial, most of postseminasal, lateral tip of prefrontal and anterior half of 2nd supralabial; a somewhat larger, more sharply defined postocular light area involving all except posteroventral corner of 5th supralabial, all except anterior edge of lower postocular, upper anterior tip of 6th supralabial and most of anterior half of anterior temporal; lower labium pigmented, thinly opposite preocular light area. Nuchal collar continuous ventrally with light color, one scale in length, interrupted medially by one scale, dimly involving posterior tip of 7th supralabial. A narrow vertebral light line beginning five scales posterior to parietals, occupying the median three-fifths of the middorsal scale row anteriorly but becoming virtually indistinguishable at the anus, not present on tail; vertebral light line more or less continuous on anterior third of trunk, but progressively more conspicuously interrupted at every scale toward rear of body; fragmented, narrow dark edges, limited to vertebral scale row, bordering middorsal light line on anterior third of body, not present posteriorly. A lateral light line on adjacent edges of scale rows 3 and 4, beginning three scales posterior to nuchal collar, scarcely evident on base of tail, disappearing on terminal half; a narrow dark brown medial border of lateral light line, limited to middle of 4th scale row on anterior half of body, expanding to merge with paravertebral pigmentation posteriorly; zone below lateral light line uniform dark brown except for dark edging along light line anteriorly; lower edge of lateral dark zone anteriorly involving upper edge only of 1st scale row, but dropping gradually to, but not onto, edge of ventrals near anus; middle third of body with sparse pigmentation on lower part of first scale row and on edges of ventrals; areas between vertebral and lateral light lines uniform light brown, except for edging previously described, lacking any evidence of linear pattern. Venter immaculate white, except as previously noted, in preservative, orange in life. (Pérez-Higareda et al. 1985)


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Comment 
EtymologyNamed after Frank Slavens of the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. 
References
  • Aguilar-López JL, Luría-Manzano R, Pineda E, Canseco-Márquez L 2021. Selva Zoque, Mexico: an important Mesoamerican tropical region for reptile species diversity and conservation. ZooKeys 1054: 127-153 - get paper here
  • Beolens, Bo; Michael Watkins, and Michael Grayson 2011. The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA - get paper here
  • Campbell, Jonathan A. 1998. Comments on the identities of certain Tantilla (Squamata: Colubridae) from Guatemala, with descriptions of two new species. Scientific Papers, Natural History Museum, University of Kansas, (7):1-14. - get paper here
  • Heimes, P. 2016. Snakes of Mexico. Chimaira, Frankfurt, 572 pp
  • Liner, Ernest A. 2007. A CHECKLIST OF THE AMPHIBIANS AND REPTILES OF MEXICO. Louisiana State University Occasional Papers of the Museum of Natural Science 80: 1-60 - get paper here
  • Perez-Higareda G; Smith H M; Smith R B 1985. A new species of Tantilla from Veracruz, Mexico. Journal of Herpetology 19 (2): 290-292 - get paper here
  • Torres-Hernández, LA, Ramírez-Bautista A, Cruz-Elizalde R, Hernández-Salinas U, Berriozabal-Islas C, DeSantis DL, Johnson JD, Rocha A, García-Padilla E, Mata-Silva V, Fucsko LA, and Wilson LD. 2021. The herpetofauna of Veracruz, Mexico: composition, distribution, and conservation status. Amphibian & Reptile Conservation 15(2) [General Section]: 72–155 - get paper here
  • Townsend, Josiah H.; Larry David Wilson, Melissa Medina-Flores, and Luis A. Herrera-B. 2013. A New Species of Centipede Snake in the Tantilla taeniata Group (Squamata: Colubridae) from Premontane Rainforest in Refugio De Vida Silvestre Texíguat, Honduras. Journal of Herpetology Mar 2013, Vol. 47, No. 1: 191-200. - get paper here
  • Wallach, Van; Kenneth L. Williams , Jeff Boundy 2014. Snakes of the World: A Catalogue of Living and Extinct Species. [type catalogue] Taylor and Francis, CRC Press, 1237 pp.
  • Wilson, L.D. 1999. Checklist and key to the species of the genus Tantilla (Serpentes: Colubridae), with some commentary on distribution. Smithsonian Herp. Inf. Serv. (122): 1-34 - get paper here
  • Wilson, Larry David and Vicente Mata-Silva 2015. A checklist and key to the snakes of the Tantilla clade (Squamata: Colubridae), with comments on distribution and conservation. Mesoamerican Herpetology 2 (4): 418 - get paper here
  • Wilson, Larry David and Vicente Mata-Silva. 2014. Snakes of the genus Tantilla (Squamata: Colubridae) in Mexico: taxonomy, distribution, and Conservation. Mesoamerican Herpetology 1 (1): 5-95 - get paper here
  • Wilson,L.D. & McCranie,J.R. 1999. The systematic status of Honduran populations of the Tantilla taeniata group (Serpentes: Colubridae), with notes on other populations. Amphibia-Reptilia 20 (3): 326-329 - get paper here
 
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