Pythonodipsas Carinata
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The western keeled snake (''Pythonodipsas carinata'') is a species of snake in the family
Pseudaspididae Pseudaspididae is a small family of elapoid snakes. They were formerly placed as a subfamily of the Lamprophiidae, but have been more recently identified as a distinct family. They have a disjunct distribution; two species (each in their own m ...
. It is native to western Namibia, southwestern Angola, and southwestern Zambia, and is the only member of the genus ''Pythonodipsas''.


Taxonomy

''P. carinata'' is most closely related to ''
Pseudaspis cana The mole snake (''Pseudaspis cana'') is a species of snake. It has been placed in the family Lamprophiidae, and more recently in the family Pseudaspididae, along with the genus ''Pythonodipsas''. It is native to much of southern Africa, and is ...
''. Together these two monotypic genera make up the subfamily
Pseudaspidinae Pseudaspididae is a small family (biology), family of Elapoidea, elapoid snakes. They were formerly placed as a subfamily of the Lamprophiidae, but have been more recently identified as a distinct family. They have a disjunct distribution; two ...
of the family
Lamprophiidae The Lamprophiidae are a family of snakes found throughout much of Africa, including the Seychelles. There are 89 species as of July 2022. Biology Lamprophiids are a very diverse group of snakes. Many are terrestrial but some are fossorial (e.g. ...
. ''Pythonodipsas'' closely resembles the
colubrine The Colubrinae are a subfamily of the family Colubridae of snakes. It includes numerous genera, and although taxonomic sources often disagree on the exact number, The Reptile Database lists 717 species in 92 genera as of September 2019. It i ...
genus ''
Spalerosophis ''Spalerosophis'' is a small genus of snakes in the family Colubridae. Geographic range Member species are found in a wide range throughout Southern Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa. Species The following species six species are recogni ...
'', although the two are not closely related.


Description

''P. carinata'' is unusual in possessing greatly fragmented head shields, a peculiar maxillary dentition (3rd to 6th largest, posterior-most tooth large and grooved), a reduced number of palatine teeth (including a greatly enlarged "fang"), and hypapophyses developed throughout the vertebral column. It was once thought to be a possible evolutionary intermediate between vipers and non-venomous colubroids, but it is now known not to be closely related to vipers.


Behavior

''P. carinata'' are nocturnal.


Diet

''P. carinata'' eat vertebrates, with lizards comprising 67% of the diet, rodents 25%, birds 4%, and unidentified vertebrate bones 4%. Among lizard prey, geckos (39% of all prey) and skinks (18%) predominated. Both nocturnal (''Afroedura'', ''Chondrodactylus'', ''Palmatogecko'' and ''Pachydactylus'') and diurnal geckos (''Rhoptropus'' and ''Narudasia'') were eaten. All skink prey were ''Mabuya'' sp. Mammalian prey were eaten primarily by larger snakes.


Distribution and habitat

''P. carinata'' is a rare snake restricted to gravel plains and arid savannah.


Reproduction

''P. carinata'' lay eggs. Females probably mature between 47.5 and 51.0 cm snout-vent length, and males between 29.0 and 31.0 cm snout-vent length. Juveniles are born at sizes between 16 and 18 cm.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q13583140 Snakes of Africa Monotypic snake genera Pseudaspididae Taxa named by Albert Günther