1. A new species of the Amphisbaena (Squamata, Amphisbaenidae) from the Brazilian Cerrado with a key for the two-pored species
- Author
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Hussam Zaher, Andrei Guimaraes Guedes, VÂnia Sá, Roberta Graboski, Alfredo P. Santos-Jr, Síria Ribeiro, Wilian Vaz-Silva, and Sheila Pereira Andrade
- Subjects
Squamata ,Reptilia ,biology ,Amphisbaena ,Zoology ,Lizards ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Amphisbaenidae ,Monophyly ,Molecular phylogenetics ,Amphisbaenia ,Animalia ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Snout ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Brazil ,Phylogeny ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Here, we describe a new species of Amphisbaena with two precloacal pores from open Cerrado areas of the municipality of Arenópolis, in the Brazilian state of Goiás. The new species differs from other South American amphisbaenids by the folllowing combination of characters: (1) snout rounded in dorsal view and slightly convex in lateral view; (2) two precloacal pores; (3) 161–176 dorsal half-annuli; and (4) 12–15 tail annuli. Our molecular phylogenetic analysis retrieved a monophyletic Amphisbaena silvestrii group, with A. silvestrii positioned as the sister-group of a clade formed by Amphisbaena anaemariae and the new species described herein. Members of the A. silvestrii group including A. neglecta and A. crisae not added in our phylogenetic analysis are characterized by a relatively small body, two precloacal pores, body coloration with dark and light areas, and lack of specializations on the cephalic or caudal shields. We present a key for two-pored species of Amphisbaena.
- Published
- 2019