The taxonomic history of the enigmatic Papuan snake genus Toxicocalamus (Elapidae: Hydrophiinae), with the description of a new species from the Managalas Plateau of Oro Province, Papua New Guinea, and a revised dichotomous key: Supplementary material
posted on 2018-08-06, 12:55authored byMark O’Shea, Allen Allison, Hinrich Kaiser
We trace the taxonomic history of Toxicocalamus,
a poorly known genus of primarily vermivorous snakes found only in New Guinea
and associated island archipelagos. With only a relatively limited number of
specimens to examine, and the distribution of those specimens across many
natural history collections, it has been a difficult task to assemble a
complete taxonomic assessment of this group. As a consequence, research on
these snakes has undergone a series of fits and starts, and we here present the
first comprehensive chronology of the genus, beginning with its original
description by George Albert Boulenger in 1896. We also describe a new species
from the northern versant of the Owen Stanley Range, Oro Province, Papua New
Guinea, and we present a series of comparisons that include heretofore
underused characteristics, including those of unusual scale patterns, skull
details, and tail tip morphology. Defined by the smallest holotype in the
genus, the new species is easily differentiated from all other Toxicocalamus
by a combination of the following eidonomic characters: fused
prefrontal-internasal scute; single preocular, separate, not fused with
prefrontal; minute circular, counter-sunk naris in the centre of a large,
undivided, nasal scute; paired postoculars; single anterior temporal and paired
posterior temporals; six supralabials, with 3rd and 4th
supralabial contacting the orbit; dorsal scales in 15-15-15 rows; 235 ventral
scales, 35 paired subcaudal scales; paired cloacal scales preceded by paired
precloacal scales; and a short, laterally slightly compressed, ‘Ultrocalamus-type’
tail, terminating in a short conical scale. Differences from congeners in skull
morphology include a reduced anterior extent of the parasphenoid, termination
of the palatine tooth row at the anterior level of the parasphenoid, extent and
shape of the premaxilla, shape and size of the prootics, extent and shape of
the exoccipitals and occipital condyles, and features of the atlas-axis
complex. This is the fifteenth species in the genus Toxicocalamus.