Amerncan Museum
ovitates
PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
CENTRAL PARK WEST AT 79TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. 10024
NUMBER 2372 MAY 12, 1969
Snakes of the Genus Contophanes in Panama
By Cuar_Les W. Myers?
The present paper is an account of three species of Conzophanes as they
occur in the Republic of Panama. Coniophanes bipunctatus is reported from
Panama for the first time, thus extending its known range approximately
625 miles southward from northeastern Honduras. A second specimen
of the recently described C. joanae provides new data on the distribution
and variation of this rare, possibly endemic snake, and allows me to
place its affinities with a South American species, C. dromiciformis. Some
observations on the wide-ranging C. fisstdens are given also.
The genus Contophanes is comprised of small-sized to medium-sized
snakes that have smooth dorsal scales in 17 to 25 anterior rows that
undergo reduction on the posterior part of the body; the body scales lack
apical pits; anal (supracloacal) ridges may be present, especially on adult
males. The head is slightly distinct from the neck, head scutellation is
generalized, and the pupil is round. The tail is of moderate length, and
anal and subcaudal plates are divided. The hemipenis is calyculate,
capitate or not, single or bifurcated, and has a forked sulcus spermaticus.
The recurved maxillary teeth are followed by a gap and two enlarged,
deeply grooved fangs. The groove varies from about one-half to four-
fifths of the length of the fang, the tip of which is laterally compressed
and knifelike, a characteristic that Laurence M. Hardy and I have
checked for each species and which may be added to the definition of
Contophanes in Bailey (1939). Members of the genus have at least traces
1Assistant Curator, Department of Herpetology, the American Museum of Natural History;
Associate in Herpetology, the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History, Lawrence.
2 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
of longitudinal body striping and may resemble the related snakes of the
genus Rhadinaea; the combination of grooved fangs and reduction in
posterior scale rows distinguishes Coniophanes from Rhadinaea, although
either characteristic alone normally suffices. Coniophanes usually is placed
in the family Colubridae, although, according to Underwood (1967), it
belongs to the Natricidae.
The five species of Coniophanes in lower Central America and South
America are separable by the following key. Two species in the key do
not occur in Panama. Coniophanes piceivittis is not found south of Costa
Rica and is not discussed in the following text. Contophanes dromictformis,
of Ecuador and Peru, is illustrated (figs. 7C, 8C, 9C) and compared
herein with C. joanae.
Key TO THE SOUTHERN SPECIES OF Coniophanes
1. Dorsal scales in 21 rows anteriorly; belly usually come aia or
speckled with dark pigment.
Dorsal scales not in 21 rows antceiony: belly immaculate or with only i incon-
spicuous dark ar oa or belly over-all darkened with diffused pigment
and smudges.
2. Two rows of bold black spots on n the venter, with little « or no additional spotting
or speckling; supralabials mottled black and white. . . . . C. dbipunctatus
Venter usually irregularly marked with black speckles and small spots that
never can be described as “large and bold” but some of which may show a
tendency to form a double row; supralabials spotted or speckled rather than
mottled, in some cases with a white longitudinal line. . . . . C. fissidens
3. Dorsal scales in 23 or 25 rows on anterior half of body; two well-defined pale
stripes on a black body; ventrals not tipped with dark pigment, lower two
scale rows pale like belly. . 2... . 2 2 « C. piceivittis
Dorsal scales in 17 or 19 rows on anterior half of body; striping not so distinct
(dark brown on medium pose ventral plates tipped with dark pigment
from lower scale rows. rer
4, Dorsal scales in a maximum of 17 rows; ‘belly diffused with brown pigment and
with a dark smudge across base of each ventral plate. . . . . C\ joanae
Dorsal scales in a maximum of 19 rows; belly pale, immaculate or with incon-
spicuous dark punctations. . . . . . . . . . . . CG dromietformis
ABBREVIATIONS
The following abbreviations designate the depositories of specimens
to which reference is made:
A.M.N.H., the American Museum of Natural History
A.N.S.P., Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
C.A.S., California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco
F.M.N.H., Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago
G.M.L., Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, Panama City, Republic of Panama
H.C.-S.R.T., collection of Howard Campbell and Sam R. Telford, Jr.
K.U., the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History, Lawrence
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 3
M.C.Z., Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge
U.M.M.Z., University of Michigan Museum of Zoology, Ann Arbor
U.S.N.M., United States National Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Washington
Contophanes bipunctatus (Giinther)
Figures 1-4A
Coronella bipunctata GUNTHER, 1858, p. 36. Type locality unknown.
DisTRIBUTION AND HasitTaT: According to published reports (Bailey,
1939; Stuart, 1963), Contophanes bipunctatus ranges from Veracruz,
Mexico, to northern Spanish Honduras. It was, therefore, with consider-
able surprise that I caught a specimen (K.U. No. 110289, fig. 1) on Isla
Escudo de Veraguas, about 20 kilometers east of the Valiente Peninsula,
northwestern coast of Panama (fig. 2). Isla Escudo is uninhabited by
man and is situated slightly more than 1000 kilometers (about 625 miles)
southeast of Tuléa (“Toloa” on my maps), northeastern Honduras,
which is the previous southernmost record for this species.
The specimen was found an hour after dark, October 17, 1966, as it
was moving across soggy ground in a swamp forest (fig. 3), behind the
beach on the east end of the island. It made no attempt to bite. Bailey
(1939, p. 26) hinted that C. bipunctatus may have semiaquatic habits; it
is noteworthy that the present individual was found in a swamp forest
and contained remains of a gymnotid eel in its stomach. Twenty-five
species of amphibians and other reptiles that I collected on the island
were found also on nearby mainland areas; the other snakes were
Drymarchon corais, Leptophis depresstrostris, Oxybelis aeneus, and Bothrops
schlegelt.
CoLoR AND PATTERN IN Lire: The five middorsal scale rows are
medium brown, on which is superimposed a darker, grayish brown,
vertebral line that overlaps slightly onto the paravertebral rows. A dark
grayish brown lateral stripe runs the length of the body on row 4 and
adjacent edges of rows 3 and 5. The body is yellowish brown between the
ventrals and lateral stripe, and between lateral stripe and dorsal dark
area; this ground color is palest on rows 3 and 5 on each side of the dark
lateral stripe, which is thus emphasized.
The top of the head is a rich, somewhat mottled brown, but this color
is not sharply delineated from the body. There is a pair of poorly de-
fined dark dots, one on each side of the anterior part of the interparietal
suture. In front of the eye, on the upper part of the preocular and the
edge of the prefrontal, is a short, black-edged, white line. This line
continues behind the eye as a series of three or four dashes on the upper
postocular, primary temporal, and the bottom temporal in row 2. A
postocular white line, heavily black-bordered above, starts at the lower
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6 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
part of the eye and runs nearly horizontally across the last three supra-
labials to the corner of the mouth, there slanting slightly downward to
continue caudad on the lower side of the nape on row 2, for a distance of
seven scales.
The labials and under side of the head are heavily mottled black and
brown on white. The venter is light yellow, turning pale orange near the
edges of the ventrals, which are slightly tipped with dark brown from
the sides of the body. There is a conspicuous, double row of bold black
spots (fig. 1), each line of which is roughly halfway between the edges
of the ventrals and the middle of the belly. These spots become tiny near
the tail, the under side of which is marked with scattered dark specks.
The iris is rust brown. The tongue is brightly colored. The stalk of the
tongue is black with orange mottling on the basal four-fifths, and pure
white distally. The forks of the tongue are bright orange on their basal
thirds, and gray on the distal two-thirds.
SIZE AND SCUTELLATION: The specimen is a moderately robust male
380 mm. in total length (preserved), of which the tail is 137 mm. or
36.1 per cent of the total. Dorsal scales are in 21-21-19 rows, and anal
ridges are present. There are 127 ventrals, 101 pairs of subcaudals, one
preocular, two postoculars, and 1+3 temporals. There are eight supra-
labials, the second to third touch the loreal, the fourth to fifth in contact
with the eye. Infralabials are 10, the first five touch the anterior genials,
the fifth to sixth touching the posterior genials.
MaxILiary Dentition: There are 13+2 teeth on the right maxilla.
The prediastemal teeth slightly increase in size from front to rear; the
fangs are less than one and one-half times larger than the posteriormost
prediastemal teeth.
HEmMIPENIs: I was able to evert the hemipenes only halfway when I
preserved the specimen in the field, but both organs were removed in
the laboratory and the one on the left side was relaxed and successfully
everted with hot paraffin, although possibly it is not so bulbous as it
should be (fig. 4A). The extended organ reaches approximately to the
end of subcaudal six if pressed against the tail. The distal one-fourth of
the organ is capitate, the capitulum being slightly bifurcate! and
calyculate. The calyces bear tiny papillae, which are longest around the
1 This is not an artifact of preparation, because I can detect partial divisions of the organs
in situ of a specimen from Guatemala (K.U. No. 57158). Curiously, the indication of bilobation
of the hemipenis and retractor muscle in situ is present only on the medial wall, in which a
narrow slit or crevice is nearly concealed by the covering mesentery and is hard to detect,
which probably explains why Bailey (1939, pp. 4, 25) regarded the hemipenis of C. bipunctatus
as being single, although the possibility of variation within the species is not ruled out.
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES q|
Fic. 3. Swamp forest habitat of Coniophanes bipunctatus, photographed October 20,
1966, on eastern end of Isla Escudo de Veraguas, northwestern Panama. The sub-
stratum is deep muck, but numerous tiny roots provide enough support to allow the
traveler to penetrate the swamp in places such as shown here.
Fic. 4. Everted hemipenes viewed from asulcate sides. A. Left organ of Contophanes
bipunctatus, snout-to-vent length 243 mm., K.U. No. 110289 (fully extended but
perhaps not completely expanded; see text). B. Right organ of Coniophanes fissidens,
snout-to-vent length, 318 mm., K.U. No. 110284. x7.
edge of the capitulum. There is an encircling band of approximately 60
spines below the capitulum. These are small near the sulcus and medium-
sized on the asulcate side (fig. 4A). The capitulum plus the band of
spines occupy the distal half of the hemipenis. ‘There are four additional
spines situated around the organ, slightly below the spinose band
mentioned above. There are some spinules on each side of the sulcus
spermaticus, which bifurcates a little below the capitulum, the branches
extending onto the capitulum but not all the way to the tip.
REMARKS: Coniophanes bipunctatus resembles some specimens of C.
fissidens in dorsal color pattern, habitus, and scutellation. The double
row of bold, black ventral spots (fig. 1), however, immediately gives
bipunctatus an entirely different aspect. Even when in well-defined rows
these spots are not so large and conspicuous in /fissidens which, in lower
Central America at least, usually has a profusion of tiny spots and
speckles. Coniophanes bipunctatus evidently has a greater number of sub-
caudals (101 in the Panamanian specimen) than does fissidens (57-74 in
15 specimens from Costa Rica and Panama). A comparison of the
preceding data with those given by Bailey (1939, pp. 20, 26) suggests
that fisstdens and bipunctatus may have opposing clines in numbers of
subcaudals. In fissedens there is a geographic increase in numbers of
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 9
subcaudals from south to north, whereas the reverse seems indicated for
bipunctatus. A most significant difference between these species is in the
nature of the hemipenes (fig. 4). There are few spines on the hemipenis
of fissidens, and the unbifurcated capitulum comprises a large part of the
organ. In bipunctatus there are more spines, and the capitulum is small
and slightly bilobated. The copulatory organ of bipunctatus is closest to
that of C. dromiciformis and that of C. joanae (q. v.).
Quite probably there is at least a partial habitat separation between
C. bipunctatus and C. fissidens, as the latter occurs on well-drained terrain
(compare figs. 3 and 6) and is unknown from swamp forest in Panama.
Contophanes fissidens (Giinther)
Figures 2, 4B-6
Coronella fissidens GUNTHER, 1858, p. 36. Type locality: Mexico.
DisTRIBUTION AND Hapitats: Coniophanes fissidens is the most widely
distributed member of the genus, with a range from Veracruz, Mexico,
to northwestern Ecuador. In Panama, its distribution can be estimated
from sparse records (fig. 2) and, because it is a litter snake, it occurs
principally in well-drained mesic forest (e.g., fig. 6) below 1000 meters
in elevation. Such forest is virtually continuous along the north (Atlantic)
coast of Panama, and extends south to the Pacific coast in two areas, in
the region of the Canal Zone and along the Colombian border. Conzo-
phanes fissidens probably occurs throughout this forest, which climatically
(and physiognomically) varies from Af tropical wet climate (rain forest,
fig. 6) to Am, tropical monsoon climate (monsoonal rain forest). The
species must be presumed absent from the extensive cuipo forests
(Cavanillesia platanifolia) and intermingled swamp forests that occur on
great expanses of nearly base-level terrain in the Chucunaque and
Bayano drainages of eastern Panama. It was not among more than 3000
snakes collected in the lower Chucunaque-Tuira basins during the
Panamanian snake census (Dunn, 1949), nor has more recent work
uncovered it there. Specimens are available from the Rio Silugandi, a
tributary of the Bayano, but, according to Heatwole and Sexton (1966,
p. 47), the forest there is on rolling, hence well-drained, ground.
Contophanes fissidens occurs in rather open country in extreme south-
western Panama near the Costa Rican border. I picked up a dead
individual on the Inter-American Highway, in a region from which all
but small groves of the forest had been cleared for some years and the
land turned to pasture (Am climate). Contophanes fissidens has been found
at an elevation of approximately 1000 meters in the vicinity of Boquete
in southwestern Panama (Slevin, 1942), but it seems absent from the
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1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 11
Fic. 6. Tropical rain-forest habitat of Coniophanes fissidens, photographed October
7, 1966, approximately 5 kilometers west of Almirante, 30-40 meters in elevation,
northwestern Panama. K.U. No. 110283 was found on the forest floor in November,
1964.
relatively well-known snake fauna above Boquete at Finca Lérida, at an
elevation of about 1600 meters (Dunn, 1947).
Coniophanes fissidens almost certainly is absent from the extensive
savanna (tropical wet and dry climate, Aw) that stretches eastward
across the base of the Azuero Peninsula and nearly to the Canal Zone,
but it does occur in mesic hill forest to the north. The species was not
represented in a collection of some 1200 snakes from the savanna in
Coclé and Herrera provinces (Dunn, 1949). Conzophanes fissidens has been
taken in a much restricted savanna area east of Panama City, but habitat
data do not accompany the specimens, and it is not known whether
they came from the grassland proper or from gallery forest along the
rivers, although the last possibility seems most probable.
Benavior: Limited observation indicates that C. fisstdens is mainly a
diurnal snake; I have seen individuals prowling in leaf litter in the
middle of the day, near Almirante and on Barro Colorado Island. Native
collectors for the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory encountered a few by
day (e.g., K.U. No. 75673) on forest trails near the upper Rio Tacarcuna
in the Serrania del Darién, near the Colombian border. I found one at
12 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
E] Valle, as it was crossing a road shortly after dark. This individual,
which had a freshly injured tail, attempted to bite after it had been
handled, but others have been docile.
One snake from the Canal Zone was kept alive for several months in
the United States. It spent most of each day lying with its head held an
inch or more above the substratum. Quite probably such a pose would
be advantageous for a small snake resting in leaf litter, as it could watch
the environment for food or predators yet remain largely concealed.
The head and nape markings (see below) possibly function as disruptive
coloration at such times.
The aforementioned individual in captivity accepted young lizards
(Eumeces fasciatus) and baby snakes (Diadophis punctatus). It displayed the
characteristic chewing motions by which rear-fanged snakes embed the
enlarged posterior teeth, then hold the prey for a few minutes until it is
motionless or dead. A juvenile of fissidens from near Almirante contained
a diurnal ground gecko (Lepidoblepharis xanthostigma), and another
juvenile from Barro Colorado Island had eaten a small diurnal frog
(Colostethus nubicola).
Cotor AND Patrern: The body is orangish brown to brown, weakly
and somewhat variably striped or lined with dark brown or black.
Usually there is a vertebral dark line or row of dots (one on each scale
apex in the vertebral row) and, in addition, the median three or seven
scale rows may be darker brown than the ground color on each side.
Most Panamanian specimens that I have seen have a dark lateral stripe
that lies principally on rows 4 and 5 and the lower edge of row 6, poste-
riorly dropping one row lower. The bottom side of this stripe tends to be
ill defined, and in one individual the entire lower sides are darkened,
as is frequent in specimens from Costa Rica. In part, this variation may
be due to ontogenetic changes, as suggested by C. B. Fisher (zn Uitz.).
The upper margin of the lateral stripe is usually distinct because of a
greater accumulation of dark pigment, and some individuals have only
this dark line as a remnant of the broader stripe, which possibly is being
lost in some populations. The upper margin of the lateral stripe, or line,
usually is further emphasized by a series of small, white or pale tan
dashes lying immediately above. These dashes are most distinct on the
posterior part of the body, usually showing no traces elsewhere except
on the neck, on which there is a short, white line several scales in length.
Also on the neck is a pair of tiny, black-bordered white ocelli. Each
ocellus is no larger than one or two scales and is situated between the
posterior temporal plates and the anterior end of the short, white line on
the sixth scale row.
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 13
The top of the head is brown, usually with an inconspicuous pair of
black dots, one on each side of the anterior part of the interparietal
suture. In some cases there is a fine, white line or series of dots extending
from the upper margin of the eye a short distance back toward the white
ocellus on the side of the nape. The upper edges of the anterior supra-
labials, from the snout to the eye, may be black-bordered or not, but all
available specimens have a black postocular line that extends obliquely
down from the eye and across the corner of the mouth to the lower side
of the neck. Adjacent to the lower edge of the postocular black line
there may be an enamel-white line that, on a few specimens, skirts the
lower edge of the eye and continues uninterrupted to the snout. Below the
white line the supralabials are grayish white and usually intensely
speckled with black. The white lip marking may be partly an attribute
of age, as it is obvious on six adults but reduced or absent from four
juveniles, in which the black specking is likewise reduced or absent.
The under side of the head is speckled with black in most specimens.
There is a black dot near the tip of each ventral plate, and the number
of black specks and little spots varies over the rest of the light venter.
Although the ventral spotting is largely irregular, there often is a
tendency for some markings to form two rows, each about a fourth to
a third of the width of a ventral from the edge of the belly.
Co or In Lire: Slevin (1942) stated that two specimens from Boquete
were light brown, with a pinkish tinge, in life. At least some individuals
from central Panama have the body strongly tinged with orange. The
white ocelli on the nape and, when present, the white labial line and
the dorsal, white postocular line (or row of dots), are enamel-white and
very conspicuous in a hand-held specimen, although on the forest floor
these markings possibly serve as disruptive (hence concealing) coloration.
The under side of the head was white in four specimens for which I
recorded data, but W. E. Duellman (field notes for K.U. No. 75672)
noted one in which the chin was pale orange. Two Canal Zone specimens
and one from El Valle had a pale to medium orange suffusion on the
sides of the belly, with a reduced median part of the ventrals and most
of the subcaudals light yellow. Another individual from El Valle had a
yellowish white venter. The iris color of specimens from central Panama
has been noted as reddish orange (two), reddish brown (one), and rich
brown (one). The tongue is brown or reddish brown, with the distal end
of the stalk and the forks black.
SIZE AND SCUTELLATION: Coniophanes fissidens is a moderately robust
snake. The largest measurable Panamanian specimen is a female 466
mm. in total length (preserved), of which the tail is 120 mm. The tail
14 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
varies from 33.1 to 41.3 per cent of the total length in three males
(including two juveniles) and from 25.8 to 38.5 per cent in six females
(including two juveniles). Any possible ontogenetic variability in the
tail length proportion is not obvious, because the extremes in the series
of females are for two adults.
The dorsal scales are smooth, except for anal ridges that are present
on some females as well as males, and usually are in 21-21-17 rows,
although there may be reduction to 19 by midbody and to 15 imme-
diately in front of the cloaca. Ventrals range from 110 to 121 (mean
114.5) in four males, and 116 to 124 (mean 119.2) in six females. Sub-
caudals are 63 to 70 (mean 66.3) in three males, and 57 to 66 (mean
61.3) in six females. There is one, or in some cases two, preoculars and
two postoculars. The general temporal formula is 1+2, although there
may be some asymmetry or other disarrangement of the basic pattern.
Supralabials are eight per side, with the second and third touching the
loreal and the fourth and fifth in contact with the eye. Infralabials are
10, or in some cases nine, with the first five (or first four if there are only
nine plates) touching the anterior genials and the fifth to sixth ( or fourth
to fifth) touching the posterior genials.
MaxiLiary DEntiTIon: A single maxilla from each of six specimens
bears 1442 teeth. The fangs are about one and one-half times larger
than the prediastemal teeth, which are subequal.
Hemipenis: The right everted organ of K.U. No. 110284 is a short and
bulbous, unbilobated structure that extends to the end of the fourth
subcaudal when pressed against the tail. Nearly the distal half is capitate
and calyculate. The calyces bear papillae on the distal and sulcate
surfaces of the capitulum, but spinules on the asulcate side. There is a
row of nine small spines immediately below the edge of the capitulum
on the sulcate side, which is very similar in appearance to the illustration
given by Bailey (1939, pl. 3, fig. 1). There are eight moderate-sized
spines on the asulcate side (fig. 4B). There are some spinules on each
side of the sulcus spermaticus, which forks at the edge of the capitulum.
The branches of the sulcus seem to extend only a short distance onto the
head of the organ.
Remarks: Any geographical trends in Panama are not detectable in
the small sample (12 specimens) at hand. In fact, three specimens from a
single locality (K.U. Nos. 110284—110286, El Valle) exhibit among
themselves a large part of the variation in the description above.
I have compared the Panamanian material with 13 Costa Rican
specimens in the University of Kansas collections, consisting of 10 from
Turrialba, Cartago Province (including the five paratypes of C. /
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 15
obsoletus), and one each from Guanacaste, Limdén, and Puntarenas
provinces. Some of the Turrialba individuals have more intensely speck-
led venters than any individuals from Panama. A short line of white dots
extending posteriorly from the upper part of each eye is prevalent in the
Costa Rican material, and shows (as a coalesced line) in a few Pana-
manian specimens. The bottom edge of the lateral stripe is obliterated to
a greater extent in most of the Costa Rican specimens, in which the
entire lower side tends to be dark, but a juvenile (K.U. No. 35654) from
Turrialba has the lateral stripe distinct and in the same scale-row
relationship as is usual in specimens from Panama. One from Limén
Province (K.U. No. 86579) has a pair of tiny white dots superimposed
on the usual dark parietal dots. Seven of 10 individuals from Turrialba
have two preoculars (rather than one) on at least one side of the head,
a situation that occurs in two of 11 from Panama (both from El Valle).
The Costa Rican specimens have on the average a few more subcaudal
plates.
In summary, then, interpopulational variation of C. fissedens in Costa
Rica and Panama seems relatively slight. Thus, if one wanted to apply
a subspecific epithet to the Panamanian snakes (which I do not), the
name Coniophanes fisstdens obsoletus Minton and Smith (type locality in
Cartago Province, Costa Rica) is available. Whether this name really
represents a population easily distinguishable from all those farther
north remains to be seen. Minton and Smith (1960) gave several diag-
nostic characters for obsoletus, but at least two characters are of dubious
value. Coniophanes f obsoletus was said to lack a white dorsolateral streak
on the nape, but all the paratypes have the same short, white, neck line
that I describe above for the Panamanian snakes. This marking was not
mentioned by Minton and Smith, and whether some northern popula-
tions of fissidens have an additional white “streak,” to which they refer,
I do not know. Minton and Smith also characterized obsoletus as lacking
a “prominent row of relatively large dark spots at the ends of the
ventrals.” Such a statement should not be construed as an absolute
difference. The spots are there but are simply smaller than the small spots
found in some more northern populations of fissedens, and the rows tend
to be inconspicuous partly because of additional speckles and little spots.
Some other diagnostic characters were given but are not very con-
vincing when one realizes that Minton and Smith were comparing quite
distant populations. It is not evident by what logic the possibility of
clinal variation is excluded in such cases.
I have indicated elsewhere (1966a) the need for a new variational
study of Coniophanes fissidens. Such a study is now being undertaken by
16 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
Clyde B. Fisher, Northwestern State College of Louisiana.
LocaLity Recorps: The distribution map (fig. 2) of C. fissedens in
Panama is based on the specimens listed below, but only those marked
by an asterisk have been examined by me. Fisher has confirmed identi-
fications of the other specimens, which he is studying. Bocas del Toro
Province: Approximately 5 kilometers west of Almirante, 40 meters, K.U.
No. *110283. Canal Zone: Ancon, K.U. No. *110287; Barro Colorado
Island, K.U. No. *75672, M.C.Z. No. 18817, U.M.M.Z. No. 63702;
ca. 5 kilometers northeast of Gamboa, A.M.N.H. No. *102326; Madden
Dam, M.C.Z. No. 38230; Madden Forest Preserve, *H.C.-S.R.T.
Chiriqui Province: Boquete, U.M.M.Z. Nos. 57959, 57961-57964; vicinity
north of Boquete, C.A.S. Nos. 79015, 79016; 7 kilometers east-southeast
of Paso Canoas, 100 meters, A.M.N.H. No. *102621; Progreso, U.M.M.Z.
Nos. 57960, 57965. Coclé Province: El Valle, 550 meters, K.U. Nos.
*110284—-*110286. Colén Province: Aqua Clara, near Chagras River,
A.N.S.P. No. 22272, M.C.Z. No. 45382. Darién Province: Laguna, 820
meters, K.U. No. *75673. Panamd Province: Cerro Jefe region. K.U. No.
*110288; Chepo, A.N.S.P. No. 24699; Rio Silugandi, U.M.M.Z. Nos.
124137, 124142; sabanas, M.C.Z. No. 45339; sabanas-Pacora area, M.C.Z.
Nos. 39759, 39760. No specific data (““Panama’’): F.M.N.H. No. 31190,
U.S.N.M. No. 13569.
Coniophanes joanae Myers
Figures 2, 7A, B, 8A, B, 9A, B, 10
Coniophanes joanae Myers, 1966a, p. 665. Type locality: Panama: Darién Prov-
ince: Serrania de Pirre, southeastern slope Cerro Pirre (=Mount Pirri, Cerro
Cana), 1440 meters in elevation.
The second known specimen of this diminutive species, and the first
male, was caught by a field assistant of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory
a few months prior to my finding of the holotype. I was unaware of this
“second” specimen until shortly before publication of the description
of C. joanae, when my colleague Eustorgio Mendéz handed it to me for
identification.
DisTRIBUTION AND Hasirats: The holotype (K.U. No. 93502) was
found in cloud forest at an elevation of 1440 meters on Cerro Pirre, in
extreme eastern Panama. The second specimen comes from the vicinity
of Altos de Pacora, near Cerro Jefe, in Panama Province; this locality is
about 30 kilometers northeast of Panama City and approximately 235
kilometers northwest of the type locality (fig. 2). Precise data are not
available, but the specimen comes from a region of mesic hill forest and
probably was caught at an elevation between 500 and 800 meters. Cerro
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 17
Jefe, at about 980 meters in elevation, is the highest peak of the Rio
Chagras watershed. Altos de Pacora is a rural community at 820 meters
in elevation, on the mud road about 7 kilometers northeastward from
Cerro Jefe.
It seems unlikely that Conzophanes joanae inhabits the extensive low-
lands that intervene between the two known localities, for it was not
found during the Panamanian snake census (Dunn, 1949), but it might
be expected in the isolated and biologically unexplored Serrania de
Cafiazas (fig. 2). A nearly continuous distribution between the known
localities might be possible, by way of the mountains and low hills that
form the continental divide close along the Atlantic coast and on the
Colombian border. A similar continuous distribution was suggested for
the frog Cerathyla panamensis in eastern Panama (Myers, 1966b), based on
essentially the same information. This suggestion was partially sub-
stantiated in 1967, when I collected Cerathyla in the northern end of the
Serrania del Darién, on the low continental divide between San Blas
and Darién provinces. Most of the aforementioned terrain lies below the
500-meter contour, hence is not indicated in figure 2, but the hills and
ridges are sufficiently high to cause mist and orographic rainfall from
the Northeast Trades, and mesic conditions prevail even in the dry
season (Myers, MS).
COLOR AND PATTERN: The two specimens are alike in having brown
venters, which are somewhat clouded and on which the brown pigment
tends to be concentrated along the bases of the ventral and subcaudal
plates, forming dark transverse streaks (fig. 7A, B). Also, the ground
color of the supralabials is brown. In these characteristics, C. joanae differs
from all of its congeners, which have basically pale labials and venters
(white in preservative). Both individuals have a black-bordered, pale,
postocular stripe (actually a series of several coalesced dashes), which
starts on the lower postocular, slants down and back across the fifth to
seventh supralabials, and stops on the lower side of the neck (on the
third scale row in the holotype, and overlapping slightly onto the second
row in the Gorgas specimen).
The brown dorsal surfaces of the two specimens are strikingly different,
and no one would hesitate to pronounce these snakes as different species
on the basis of a cursory glance. The holotype has a dark middorsal
streak on the median three scale rows (fig. 7A), and this becomes a defi-
nite, blackish-edged stripe near the end of the body and on the tail
(Myers, 1966a, fig. 1). But the Gorgas specimen has three dorsal, longi-
tudinal, dark markings (fig. 7B) that are conspicuous throughout the
length of the body, although on the tail they merge to form a single
18 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
q . i
7
\
\
f
*
\
a
$
en
Fic. 7. Midbody patterns of Coniophanes joanae (17 scale rows) and C. dromictformis
(19 rows), drawn on generalized scale patterns. A, B. C. joanae. (A. Holotype. B.
Gorgas Memorial Laboratory specimen.) C. C. dromiciformis, U.S.N.M. No. 165757,
Rio Macul near Balzar, Guayas Province, Ecuador.
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 19
Fic. 8. Head and neck patterns. A, B. Conzophanes joanae. (A. Holotype. The thick-
ness of the neck is due to over-inflation with preservative. B. Gorgas Memorial
Laboratory specimen.) C. C. dromiciformis, U.S.N.M. No. 165758, El Milagro,
Guayas Province, Ecuador. Approximately x 2.5-3.
stripe like that of the holotype. The median marking is a dark-edged
stripe that covers the vertebral scale row and overlaps slightly onto the
paravertebral (eighth) rows. On each side is a broad, blackish brown
line on the edges of the seventh and eighth rows. That these middorsal
differences are but variations on a basic pattern is revealed by the tail
stripe and by the head and nape markings (fig. 8A, B). On the nape of
the holotype, the broad, poorly defined, middorsal streak splits into a
narrower vertebral stripe and two very faint accessory lines, all of which
match the trunk markings of the Gorgas snake. The vertebral stripe ex-
tends forward onto the head where it disintegrates into barely discernible
markings that match the darker vermiculations on the head of the Gorgas
specimen. Thus, the dorsal markings, which differ so much on the trunks,
become identical on the tails and heads and napes of the two specimens,
although anteriorly they differ greatly in intensity.
The holotype has a blackish brown lateral line along the bottom of the
fourth scale row (fig. 7A). The Gorgas individual has an identical mark-
ing which, however, blends with dark brown pigment below to form a
broader lateral stripe, the whole occupying adjacent parts of rows 3 and
4 (fig. 7B). In both specimens the lateral stripe, or line, is continuous
anteriorly with a pale brown stripe on the side of the head, above the
20 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
TABLE 1
ScaLE Counts, S1zEs (IN MILLIMETERS),
AND Proportions OF KNOWN SPECIMENS OF Coniophanes joanae
Character Male Female
Gorgas Memorial Laboratory Holotype, K.U. No. 93502
Dorsal scale rows 17-17-15 17-17-15
Paravertebral rows lost
opposite ventral numbers 90/92 81/79
Ventrals 132 131
Subcaudals 53 474
Supralabials 7/7 7/7
Infralabials 9/9 8/8
Preoculars 1/1 1/1
Postoculars 2/2 2/2
Temporals (each side) 142 1+2
Total length 290 369
Tail length 69 814
Tail/total length 0.238 0.219
Head length® 12.0 11.5
Head width* 7.0 8.0
Head width/head length 0.583 0.696
«Terminal spine missing, including possibly one or two pairs of subcaudals.
> Snout to posterior end of mandible (postarticular process), a different standard from that
used in the original description (Myers, 1966a, p. 665). Measurements are to nearest half
millimeter.
¢Greatest width (between sixth pair of supralabials in both specimens), to nearest half
millimeter.
postocular pale stripe and behind the eye; in both specimens the lateral
marking extends to the tip of the tail. The Gorgas specimen has faint
dark streaks on rows | and 2 which are not present on the holotype.
The colors of the holotype in life are given in detail in the original
description and are repeated here in abbreviated form. The dorsal
ground color was medium brown and the venter orangish brown. The
postocular light stripe was pale orange. The iris was pale orangish tan,
which on each side of the pupil was darkened by reddish pigment.
SIZE AND SCUTELLATION: Pertinent data comparing the two known
specimens are set down in table 1, where it can be seen that the differ-
ences are minor. The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory specimen has some
additional minor differences from the published description (q.v.) of the
holotype as follows: the rostral is slightly more than twice as broad as
high; the frontal is twice as long as the distance from its anterior edge
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 21
to the tip of the snout (this proportion appears different in fig. 8B be-
cause of parallax); there is no groove on the nasal; one loreal plate is
quadrangular in shape and the other is slightly pentagonal; the lower
postocular is less than one-half of the size of the upper; the first four
infralabials are in contact with an anterior genial on both sides, and the
fourth and fifth labials touch the posterior genials; and the posterior
genials are only about one and one-fourth times longer than the anterior
ones. The eyes of the Gorgas specimen seem relatively larger, in that their
diameters go less than one and one-half times into the length of the
snout and they are visible from a ventral aspect.
Maxitiary Dentition: The maxillary formulas for the holotype are
14+ 2 (left) and 13+2 (right), and for the Gorgas specimen 15+2 on
both sides. The prediastemal teeth increase slightly from front to rear
in the holotype but are subequal in the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory
specimen; the ultimate prediastemal socket lies well anterior to the
ectopterygoid process. The left maxilla of the holotype is illustrated as
figure 9A, and, as can be seen, the diastema is broad, being about four
times the length of a prediastemal socket, rather than the lower number
that I gave in the original description. The shape of the maxillaries of the
Gorgas specimen are different from those of the holotype, especially in
that the posterior dip on the dorsal surface is longer and smoothly curved
and lacks the angular process seen in the holotype (compare fig. 9A with
fig. 9B).
Hemipenis: The following description is of the left inverted organ,
which first was examined im situ and then removed for illustration (fig.
10) and detailed study. The hemipenis is slightly bilobate, bifurcating
opposite the end of the seventh subcaudal and with the lobes extending
to the base of the ninth subcaudal. The two slips of the retractor muscle
merge opposite the end of subcaudal 9, and the muscle inserts at the level
of the twenty-fifth subcaudal. The sulcus spermaticus lies on the ventro-
lateral wall and forks at the end of the fifth caudal, one branch disap-
pearing into the dorsal lobe (not opened) and the other running to the
tip of the ventral lobe.
The extreme base of the organ is nude; 1 mm. above the base there is
an ornamentation of spinules, which are most numerous and developed
in the region of the sulcus. Four large, straight spines arise, equally
spaced, across the middle of the hemipenis, and their points extend well
onto the basal half of the organ, which otherwise is nude except for
the small clusters of spinules already mentioned. Above the bases of the
large spines and below the lobes is a thickly spinose area, which contains
in excess of 50 small to medium-sized, straight or slightly recurved spines.
22 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
Fic. 9. Maxillae. A. From holotype of Coniophanes joanae left side. B. From C.
joanae, Gorgas Memorial Laboratory specimen, right side (drawing reversed). C. C.
dromiciformis, U.S.N.M. No. 165758, El Milagro, Guayas Province, Ecuador, right
side (drawing reversed). x 15.
Many spinules are scattered among the basalmost of these spines, which
are not in regular rows. The lobes and the space between the branches of
the sulcus are covered with papillate calyces. There is a small cluster of
slender, longer papillae on the asulcate side of the lobes. The bilobation
is not extensive; the lobes occupy only about the distal one-seventh of the
organ. A slight capitation seems to be discernible across the base of the
exposed lobe, on its asulcate side, but an everted hemipenis is needed to
verify this.
Remarks: Taxonomic decisions often are subjective, as is my con-
clusion that the snake from Panama Province is conspecific with the
holotype of Coniophanes joanae from Darién. It can hardly be disputed
that these specimens come from closely related populations. Not only
are they similar in scutellation and proportions, but their ventral and
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 23
Fic. 10. Left inverted hemipenis of Coniophanes joanae (Gorgas Memorial Labora-
tory specimen), opened by midventral incision. x 8.7.
labial colorations are unique in Coniophanes, and the occurrence of only
17 anterior rows of dorsal scales is known elsewhere in the genus only
for C. meridanus, a snake of very different aspect which lives on the Yuca-
tan Peninsula. Nevertheless, the dorsal patterns and shapes of the maxil-
lae differ so strikingly that some workers might justifiably conclude that
two different, albeit related, species were involved. My own viewpoint is
influenced by the totality of resemblances, including the fact that the
two different trunk patterns become virtually identical on the heads and
tails of the two specimens. Of course, neither viewpoint can be “proved”
without additional data, particularly concerning intrapopulational vari-
ation in maxillary shape and trunk pattern.
Perhaps I should now answer a charge that may be made, namely,
that the two specimens should at least be considered representatives of
different subspecies. In the first place, subspecies is not an obligate
taxonomic category, and I prefer not to use it. More to the point, the
naming of subspecies without a prior understanding of variation is an
all-too-common practice and a violation of scientific method, in that
speculation is carried beyond all reason. Such guesswork has led to an
undue proliferation of names that must be stored in synonymy. Although
the two known specimens of C. joanae are quite different in appearance,
there is no evidence that the differences are the reflection of discon-
cordant geographic variation instead of intrapopulational variation or
clinal variation. I shall elsewhere demonstrate at least one case, in the
related genus Rhadinaea, in which the sampling of a single population
can produce individuals as strikingly different as these two individuals
of Coniophanes.
24 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
I found significant resemblances when comparing both specimens of
Coniophanes joanae with four of C. dromiciformis, from Ecuador (U.S.N.M.
Nos. 165757—165759) and Peru (M.C.Z. No. 12426). The Ecuadoran
specimens of dromiciformis have a grayish brown middorsal stripe on the
median five scale rows (fig. 7C). In the Peruvian specimen this stripe nar-
rows to the median three scale rows plus one-half row on each side, and
there is a series of pale dashes on each paravertebral row, which gives
this individual an appearance closest to the male specimen of joanae
(fig. 7B). In all four specimens of dromiciformis the dorsal marking splits
into three discrete parts on the nape (fig. 8C), with the median stripe
extending onto the head, where it, in turn, may split into vague parallel
markings (in three of four specimens). Postocular dark and light stripes
are in the same relative positions as in C. joanae, and the dark one is con-
tinuous with a lateral stripe on the body; this lateral stripe is on the same
scale rows in joanae and dromiciformis, despite the greater number of scale
rows on the anterior part of the trunk of the latter (fig. 7B, C). There
may be a heavy suffusion of brown pigment on the labials of dromiciformis,
but these plates are not so darkened as in joanae. The maxilla of one of
the dromiciformis is illustrated as figure 9C, but in our present state of
knowledge nothing can be made of either similarities or differences in
this bone.
The hemipenis of C. joanae comes out closest to that of dromiciformis in
Bailey’s key (1939, pp. 4, 5) in being slightly bilobated, in having en-
larged spines below a band of smaller ones, and in seeming to have at
least a trace of capitation. Direct comparison of the left hemipenis of
dromiciformis (M.C.Z. No. 12426) with that of joanae reveals great simi-
larity. Both have four large spines equally spaced across the middle of
the organ and a dense spinose area between these and the calyculate
lobes, which are only about one-seventh of the total length of the organ.
Neither specimen has a well-defined capitulum, but the calyces form a
slight overhang on the asulcate side of the lobe; this is best developed in
dromiciformis. The differences between the two organs are several, but do
not detract from the over-all similarity. In dromiciformis the papillae on
the calyces are all about equal, whereas in joanae there are some long,
slender papillae on the asulcate side of the lobe. There are fewer small-
and medium-sized spines in the specimen of dromiciformis, and probably
for that reason the spines seem to form more regular rows. I counted
about three dozen spines (excluding the four large ones) in dromiciformis
and more than 50 in joanae. The spinules on the base of the hemipenis
of dromiciformis are rather uniformly distributed and not clustered as in
joanae.
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 25
Conwophanes dromictformis stands alone in Bailey’s (1939, p. 12) arrange-
ment of the genus. Because of the above-mentioned similarities in pattern
and hemipenis, I suggest that dromiciformis and joanae are closer to each
other than to any other congener and that they may be regarded as
forming a natural species group. Bailey (loc. cit.) speculated that dromi-
ciformis arose from an imperialis stock of Contophanes. New data in the
present paper on the hemipenis and distribution of bipunctatus must, how-
ever, be taken into consideration. As in the dromiciformis group, the hemi-
penis of bipunctatus has a small, slightly bilobated capitulum and four
large spines spaced around the middle of the organ, with a dense area
of smaller spines above. The hemipenis in the imperialis group is so dif-
ferent as to “possibly make this group deserving of generic rank” (Bailey,
loc. cit.). It might be argued that the hemipenial similarity of the
dromiciformis and bipunctatus groups is of greater importance than the low
number of scale rows and lack of anal ridges characteristic of both the
dromiciformis and imperialis groups. The absence of spines and other pe-
culiarities of the hemipenes of imperialis and meridanus (Bailey, 1939, p. 5)
lead me to believe that these species are far removed from the ancestors
of the dromiciformis group and that no great importance can be attached
to similarities in the low number of scale rows and absence of anal ridges.
Contrary to other views (Bailey, 1939, pp. 8, 9), it seems logical to me
that ancestral Coniophanes might have had 21 rows of scales and that
populations characterized by fewer rows might have arisen on several
occasions. Whatever happened, Bailey’s thesis seems weakened by his
stress on the importance of “19 scale rows and higher ventral counts” in
the nominal C. brevifrons and C. fissidens andresensis. Coniophanes brevifrons is
now regarded as having been probably erroneously described from
“Ecuador” and a synonym of andresensis, from San Andrés Island off the
coast of Nicaragua (Dunn and Saxe, 1950). Insular populations of
snakes generally have high numbers of ventrals (and subcaudals), as in-
dicated by Mertens (1934, p. 77) and Zweifel (1960, p. 114). Anal ridges
have not often proved to be a useful taxonomic character. Not only are
these structures in some cases subject to great ontogenetic, sexual, and
uncorrelated variation (Myers, 1965, p. 83; 1967, pp. 72, 73), but they
also may occur commonly in one species but not in another of the same
group (e.g., in the dachrymans-godmani group of Rhadinaea).
Because of the range extension of Coniophanes bipunctatus into Panama,
and the discovery of C. joanae, the distribution of C. dromiciformis no longer
seems as anomalous as it did to Bailey (1939, p. 12). Contophanes dromi-
ciformis is known only from “‘Peru” and from elevations below 100 meters
near the Gulf of Guayaquil in southern Ecuador. In addition to an old
26 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
record for Guayaquil (cited by Bailey, 1939), I know of the following
localities, all in Guayas Province: vicinity of Babahoyo (Steindachner,
1902, p. 107); El Milagro (U.S.N.M. Nos. 165758, 165759); and Rio
Macul near Balzar, 50 meters (U.S.N.M. No. 165757). Contophanes
dromiciformis thus occupies lower and drier habitat than the hill forests
of eastern Panama, in which C. joanae lives. Nothing is known of the
natural history of either species, except that a specimen (U.S.N.M. No.
165758) of dromiciformis had a small frog of the genus Leptodactylus in its
stomach. The similarities between C. dromiciformis and C. joanae evidently
cannot be explained by convergent adaptation to comparable habitat,
and they seem too close to have arisen independently from any other
kind of Coniophanes now extant. Consequently, they must be regarded as
southern remnants of an ancestral stock that at one time was more wide-
spread.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The field work (1964-1967) that provided most of the material for
this report was supported by Grant GM-12020 from the National In-
stitutes of Health to the University of Kansas. My tenure as a Visiting
Scientist with the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory (Panama City) was
most pleasant, and I owe a large debt of gratitude to Dr. Martin D.
Young (Director), Mr. Pedro Galindo, Mr. Eustorgio Mendéz, Dr. Carl
M. Johnson, Mr. José Antonio Tarté, and others of the staff for facilitating
my work. Mr. Mendéz lent the second known specimen of Contophanes
joanae and other interesting material. Mr. Kenneth T. Nemuras sent me
a living specimen of C\ fissidens after my return to the United States, and
an additional preserved specimen was provided by Drs. Howard Camp-
bell and Sam R. Telford, Jr. Dr. James A. Peters of the United States
National Museum, Smithsonian Institution and Dr. Ernest E.
Williams of the Museum of Comparative Zoology provided several ex-
amples of C. dromiciformis for comparisons. Mr. David M. Dennis executed
figures 4, 9A, 9C, and 10, and Mrs. Ellen E. Bowler drew figure 9B.
The manuscript benefited from a reading by Dr. Richard G. Zweifel,
and the section on C. fisstdens was reviewed by Mr. Clyde B. Fisher.
Little snakes of the forest floor are uncommon in much of Panama,
and I remember details of most encounters, including the companionship
of Dr. Wiliam E. Duellman and Mr. Témas Quintero, with whom I
shared in some captures of C. fisstdens. For encouragement and help in
many ways, I am grateful most of all to my wife, to whom the species
Contophanes joanae is dedicated.
1969 MYERS: CONIOPHANES 27
LITERATURE CITED
BAILEY, JOSEPH R.
1939. A systematic revision of the snakes of the genus Contophanes. Papers
Michigan Acad. Sci., Arts and Letters, vol. 24, pp. 1-48, pls. 1-3.
Dunn, EMMETT REID
1947. Snakes of the Lérida Farm (Chiriqui Volcano, western Panama). Copeia,
pp. 153-157.
1949. Relative abundance of some Panamanian snakes. Ecology, vol. 30, pp.
39-57.
Dunn, EMMETT RED, AND L. H. SAxg, Jr.
1950. Results of the Catherwood-Chaplin West Indies Expedition, 1948. Part
V. Amphibians and reptiles of San Andrés and Providencia. Proc. Acad.
Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, vol. 102, pp. 141-165.
GUNTHER, ALBERT
1858. Catalogue of colubrine snakes in the collection of the British Museum.
London, xvi+ 281 pp.
HEATWOLE, HAROLD, AND OWEN J. SEXTON
1966. Herpetofaunal comparisons between two climatic zones in Panama.
Amer. Midland Nat., vol. 75, pp. 45-60.
MERTENS, ROBERT
1934. Die Insel-Reptilien, ihre Ausbreitung, Variation und Artbildung.
Zoologica, Stuttgart, no. 84, [iv]+209 pp., pls. 1-6.
MINTON, SHERMAN A., AND Hopart M. SMITH
1960. A new subspecies of Coniophanes fissidens and notes on Central American
amphibians and reptiles. Herpetologica, vol. 16, pp. 103-111.
Myers, CHaArLEs W.
1965. Biology of the ringneck snake, Diadophis punctatus, in Florida. Bull.
Florida State Mus., Biol. Sci., vol. 10, pp. 43-90.
1966a. A new species of colubrid snake, genus Conzophanes, from Darién, Panama.
Copeia, pp. 665-668.
1966b. The distribution and behavior of a tropical horned frog, Cerathyla
panamensis Stejneger. Herpetologica, vol. 22, pp. 68-71.
1967. The pine woods snake, Rhadinaea flavilata (Cope). Bull. Florida State
Mus., Biol. Sci., vol. 11, pp. 47-97.
{[MS.] The ecological geography of cloud forest in Panama.
SLEVIN, JOSEPH R.
1942. Notes on a collection of reptiles from Boquete, Panama, with the de-
scription of a new species of Hydromorphus. Proc. California Acad. Sci.,
vol. 23, pp. 463-480, pls. 39-42.
STEINDACHNER, FRANZ
1902. Herpetologische und Ichthyologische Ergebnisse einer Reise nach
Siidamerika. Denkschr. K. Akad. Wiss., Math.-Naturwiss. CL., Vienna,
vol. 72, pp. 89-112, pls. 1-5.
Stuart, L. C.
1963. A checklist of the herpetofauna of Guatemala. Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool.,
Univ. Michigan, no. 122, pp. 1-150.
UNDERWOOD, GARTH
1967. A contribution to the classification of snakes. Publ. Brit. Mus. (Nat.
Hist.), no. 653, x+179 pp.
28 AMERICAN MUSEUM NOVITATES NO. 2372
ZWEIFEL, RICHARD G.
1960. Results of the Puritan-American Museum of Natural History expedition
to western Mexico 9. Herpetology of the Tres Marfas Islands. Bull. Amer.
Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 119, pp. 77-128, pls. 41-44.