4.1 Article

First Report of Hemipenial Variation among Some Genera and Species of Shieldtail Snakes (Serpentes: Uropeltidae) from India and Sri Lanka

Journal

ICHTHYOLOGY AND HERPETOLOGY
Volume 110, Issue 2, Pages 299-314

Publisher

AMER SOC ICHTHYOLOGISTS & HERPETOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1643/h2021024

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Funding

  1. US NSF [DEB1441719]
  2. DBT-IISc Partnership Programme
  3. Science & Engineering Research Board NPDF grant [PDF/2020/000527]

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Hemipenial characteristics provide valuable morphological characters for systematic classification of snakes, but remain poorly known in many groups. This study reports on hemipenial morphology of 12 species from the family Uropeltidae, with some species photographed or illustrated for the first time. Gross hemipenial morphology can now aid in diagnosing uropeltids to the genus level or species group.
Hemipenial characteristics have historically provided a wealth of comparative morphological characters for the systematic classification of snakes. However, the organs remain poorly known in many groups, particularly tropical and burrowing lineages. Here, we report on hemipenial morphology for 12 species from five genera from the family Uropeltidae: Melanophidium punctatum, M. cf. wynaudense, Plectrurus perrotetii, Rhinophis karinthandani, R. melanoleucus, R. saffragamus, R. sanguineus, Teretrurus cf. hewstoni, Uropeltis bhupathyi, U. cf. ceylanica, U. macrolepis, and U. rajendrani. Many are photographed or illustrated here for the first time. In Melanophidium, the organ is bulbous and mushroomshaped, with the sulcus spermaticus winding through numerous convoluted folds. In Plectrurus and Teretrurus, it is simple, smooth, and conical. In Sri Lankan Rhinophis and some Uropeltis, the organ generally resembles previously described hemipenes from other species in those genera in being simple, subcylindrical, and covered in fine spines. However, a median lobular process is observed in the Indian species R. karinthandani, R. melanoleucus, and R. sanguineus, seemingly representing a novel bilobate morphology. One species, U. bhupathyi, exhibits a novel, bulbous morphology, but this may be an artifact of preservation. The hemipenes of the Uropeltidae and their sister group Cylindrophiidae resemble some typhlopoid blindsnakes more than their henophidian relatives such as pythons and boas. Whether this is due to convergence related to microhabitat, a form of sexual selection unrelated to ecomorphology, or symplesiomorphy from an ancestral snake morphology is unclear. Gross hemipenial morphology can now serve to diagnose uropeltids to the genus level or species group, though more data and comparative series are needed to determine whether other characters, such as the number and location of spines, can potentially differentiate taxa at finer scales.

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