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Type: Articles
Published: 2011-12-06
Page range: 43–54
Abstract views: 56
PDF downloaded: 1

Description of a new and critically endangered species of Atheris (Serpentes: Viperidae) from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania, with an overview of the country’s tree viper fauna

Tropical Biodiversity Section, Museo delle Scienze, Via Calepina 14, I–38100 Trento, Italy; Department of Environmental & Geographical Sciences at Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester; United Kingdom
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), PO Box 1475, Mbeya & PO Box 922, Zanzibar; Tanzania
Department of Zoology & Wildlife Conservation, PO Box 35064, University of Dar es Salaam, Dar es Salaam; Tanzania
Reptilia Viperidae Atheris new species Southern Highlands Tanzania Conservation

Abstract

A new species of arboreal forest viper (Serpentes: Viperidae: Atheris) from a forest fragment in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania is described and named Atheris matildae sp. nov. The species resembles the forest horned viper, Atheris ceratophora Werner, by bearing horn-like supraciliary scales but it differs in size, body proportions, scalation, scale ultrastructure, and distribution. Genetic divergence is also assessed and the two species have an estimated divergence time of approximately 2.2 million years. An overview of the genus Atheris in Tanzania, including new distribution data, is presented and the conservation status of the new taxon is discussed.

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