Guedes Thaís B, Nogueira Cristiano, Marques Otavio A V
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biologia Animal, Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas, Universidade Estadual Paulista. Rua Cristovão Colombo, 2265, Jardim Nazareth, CEP 15054-000, São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo, Brazil.; Email:
Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, Laboratório de Herpetologia. Av. Nazaré, 481, Ipiranga, CEP 04263-000, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.; Email:
Zootaxa. 2014 Sep 19;3863:1-93. doi: 10.11646/zootaxa.3863.1.1.
The present study is a synthesis on snake diversity and distribution in the Caatinga region of northeastern Brazil, providing an updated species list and data on natural history and geographic distribution. Our study is based on the careful revision of 7,102 voucher specimens, housed in 17 herpetological collections, complemented by data on taxonomic literature. We recorded a total of 112 snake species in the Caatinga, belonging to nine families: Anomalepididae, Leptotyphlopidae, Typhlopidae, Aniliidae, Boidae, Viperidae, Elapidae, Colubridae, and Dipsadidae. Our list includes at least 13 never recorded species for this region, as well as distribution records for all species known from the Caatinga (including expansion and new records of distribution). The snake assemblage of the Caatinga is complex, sharing species with other continental open areas (38.4%), forested areas (27.7%), and both open and forested areas (32.1%). The richest areas were isolated plateaus, followed by contact areas, semi-arid caatinga, and sandy dunes of the São Franscisco River. We identified 22 Caatinga endemic species with the sandy dunes of São Franscico River showing the highest endemism level (12 species, with six endemic species restricted to the area) followed by semi-arid caatinga, and isolated plateaus (eight endemic species each, and six and three endemic species with restricted distribution to each area, respectively). Most species show relatively restricted ranges in parts of the Caatinga. The snake assemblage in Caatinga includes mainly terrestrial species (38.4%), followed by fossorial/cryptozoic (26.8%), arboreal/semi-arboreal (26.8%), and aquatic/semi-aquatic (7.1%) species. Vertebrates are the most important dietary item (80.4%), with 56.6% of species being generalist consumers of this kind of prey; 24.4% are frog-eaters, 7.8% prey on caecilians/amphisbaenians, 6.7% lizard-eaters, 3.3% mammal-eaters, and 1.1% are fish-eaters. Only 18.7% of the snakes eat invertebrate prey, as arthropods, annelids, and mollusks. In relation to time of activity, 35.7% of snakes are both diurnal and nocturnal, 33.0% are strictly nocturnal, and 30.4% are diurnal. The data provided herein increase the list of Caatinga snake species from 50 to 112, and includes detailed maps and information on geographic distribution. The Caatinga snake assemblage shows high richness and endemism levels, and our results highlight the usefulness of basic natural history data and revision of voucher specimens as baseline information for biogeographic studies and conservation strategies.
本研究对巴西东北部卡廷加地区的蛇类多样性和分布进行了综合分析,提供了最新的物种清单以及自然历史和地理分布数据。我们的研究基于对保存在17个爬行动物标本馆中的7102份凭证标本的仔细修订,并辅以分类学文献数据。我们在卡廷加地区共记录了112种蛇类,分属于9个科:盲蛇科、细盲蛇科、盲蛇科、管蛇科、蚺科、蝰蛇科、眼镜蛇科、游蛇科和闪鳞蛇科。我们的清单包括至少13种该地区从未记录过的物种,以及卡廷加已知所有物种的分布记录(包括分布范围的扩大和新记录)。卡廷加的蛇类群落很复杂,与其他大陆开阔地区(38.4%)、森林地区(27.7%)以及开阔和森林地区(32.1%)共有物种。最丰富的区域是孤立的高原,其次是接触区域、半干旱卡廷加和圣弗朗西斯科河的沙丘。我们确定了22种卡廷加特有物种,圣弗朗西斯科河的沙丘特有程度最高(12种,其中6种特有物种仅限于该地区),其次是半干旱卡廷加和孤立的高原(各有8种特有物种,分别有6种和3种特有物种分布范围受限)。大多数物种在卡廷加部分地区的分布范围相对较窄。卡廷加的蛇类群落主要包括陆栖物种(38.4%),其次是穴居/隐栖物种(26.8%)、树栖/半树栖物种(26.8%)和水生/半水生物种(7.1%)。脊椎动物是最重要的食物项目(80.4%),56.6%的物种是这类猎物的一般消费者;24.4%以蛙类为食,7.8%捕食蚓螈/蚓蜥,6.7%捕食蜥蜴,3.3%捕食哺乳动物,1.1%捕食鱼类。只有18.7%的蛇以无脊椎动物为食,如节肢动物、环节动物和软体动物。关于活动时间,35.7%的蛇昼夜活动,33.0%严格夜行,30.4%昼行。本文提供的数据将卡廷加蛇类物种清单从50种增加到112种,并包括详细的地理分布图和分布信息。卡廷加的蛇类群落显示出高丰富度和特有程度,我们的结果突出了基本自然历史数据和凭证标本修订作为生物地理学研究和保护策略基线信息的有用性。