HC 39 7thed
HC 39 7thed
HC 39 7thed
2012
M. Dennis, 2010. Based on Pacific Northwest aboriginal designs from the Haida cultural
group. Frogs and eagles are standard Haida and Tlingit elements in totems and other objects. This frog image is a variation on the SSARs standard frog logo and is for exclusive
use for the 2012 World Congress of Herpetology.
ISBN 978-0-916984-85-4
Table of Contents
Introduction
Literature Cited
Acknowledgments
10
Anura - Frogs
11
Caudata - Salamanders
23
Squamata - Lizards
32
Squamata - Snakes
52
Crocodilia - Crocodilians
72
Testudines - Turtles
73
Alien Species
82
INTRODUCTION
The seventh edition of the scientific and standard English names list
for North American amphibians and reptiles north of Mexico is also a special
publication for the seventh World Congress of Herpetology and we are delighted
to share it with the global herpetological community. The seventh edition is an
update of the sixth edition published in 2008, with new scientific and English
names as well as annotations explaining those changes. An online version can be
found at http://www.ssarherps.org/pages/comm_names/Index.php.
Because of the expanded readership of this edition, we present a brief
history of names lists for the North American (north of Mexico) herpetofauna.
The history begins with Copes Checklist of North American Batrachia and
Reptilia (1875). Copes effort focused on adopting certain rules of nomenclature
because they offer the only means by which writings of authors in the sciences
concerned can be intelligible. While Copes checklist only presented scientific
names, Yarrow (1882) produced a new checklist that included both scientific
and common or vernacular names. As far as we know, Yarrow (1882) made
the first formal attempt to provide both vernacular names and scientific names
for the North American herpetofauna. Yarrow (1882: 4) noted that developing
vernacular names was a challenging proposition:
Considerable difficulty has been experienced in furnishing English
names for many species of reptiles, particularly as the same reptiles may be
known by local names in different parts of the country; and to this task was
added the very laborious one of translating as literally as possible some of the
polysyllabic Greek and Latin names.
Stejneger and Barbour followed Yarrow, publishing five editions of
A Check List of North American Amphibians and Reptiles (1917, 1923, 1933,
1939, 1943), and like Yarrow they found vernacular names difficult to handle. In
the first edition (1917: iii), Barbour wrote:
Common names for reptiles and amphibians are in great confusion,
and are often of generic rather than of specific application. No attempt is made
to recognize any except those which are in well established usage. The host
which have been recently coined by various writers are frequently inapt and
almost surely unlikely to survive.
So Stejneger and Barbour took a step back from Yarrows vernacular
names and used very few in the five editions of their checklist. In fact, Stejneger
and Barbour never commented again on vernacular names in the introductions of
the later editions. By the fifth edition (1943: v), a new issue became the object of
their attention and ire.
Reviewing genera has lately become a fashion and when carefully
and competently done is a good fashion. Many of the modern revisionists have
become infected with the nazi formenkreis or rassenkreis idea, and that may
not be such a bad fashion either if the search for true relationship and affinity
is carried out in its legitimate field which is phylogeny and not taxonomy.
subspecies is an interesting occupation and has often been of great profit to the
taxonomist. But when the phylogenists [sic] begin to play with the nomenclature
and want to express their (often very tenuous, sometimes fantastic) ideas in
names, then goodbye to stability of nomenclature which we have been sweating
for all these years.
A check-list should not be made the means of propaganda [emphasis
theirs] for anybodys phylogenetic imaginations. Its object is to give users a
key to the normal taxonomic status of the named forms and their geographic
distribution. And for this purpose a name is a name and its main function is to
give a handle to the form (species, subspecies, race) we are talking about.
The latter passage was from an anonymous letter to Barbour (i.e.
Barbour did not give the name of the author), which he quoted to express his
own opinion on the matter of phylogeny affecting nomenclatural changes. The
issue continues to resonate with regard to names and the function of such lists
(e.g. see Crother, 2009; Frost et al., 2009; Pauly et al. 2009).
The next version of A Check List of North American Amphibians and
Reptiles was completed by Schmidt (1953) and was the first to be sponsored by
a scientific society, the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
(ASIH). Schmidt composed a grand volume and revived the inclusion of
common names for all species and subspecies. According to Schmidt in
his preface, his volume was born out of frustration over failed committee
machinery. At the time of the publication of Schmidts list (1953), a new
committee was appointed by the ASIH president and it produced a list three
years later (Conant et al., 1956). The list by Conant et al. was quite different
from that of Schmidt (1953). Schmidts checklist was 280 pages while that
of Conant et al. was only 13. Whereas Schmidts check list included (for
species) the scientific name, its author, a citation of the original description
(and synonyms and nomenclatural changes when relevant), a summary of the
geographic distribution, and the common name, the list by Conant et al. was
presented explicitly as a list of common names and was therefore stripped down
to only the scientific names and the corresponding common names. It should
be noted that Conant et al. (1956: 172) presented their list as standard common
names
suitable for use by zoo and museum personnel, other writers of
labels, guide books, and popular handbooks, camp counselors, biology teachers,
professional zoologists whose chief interest is not herpetology, and anyone else
who could make profitable use of such a standard list of names.
The Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles (SSAR) took
over the task of producing the list (Collins et al., 1978) and like its predecessor
(Conant et al. 1956), the first SSAR list contained only scientific and common
names. Collins et al. (1978) is the first list in which common names are called
standard common names. A subtle change in the name formation occurred in
the 1978 list, where names that were adjectives, such as black-headed snake,
became nouns as in blackhead snake. This change in language was retained
over the first four editions published by SSAR. The second SSAR edition
(Collins et al., 1982) added the authors of the genus names and the third edition
(Collins, 1990) included the names author and the year of the description for
all taxa. The fourth edition (Collins, 1997) followed the format of the third.
A significant philosophical change occurred between the list by Conant et
al. (1956) and those by Collins with regard to the usage of common names.
Whereas Conant et al. downplayed the usage of common names, the Collins
lists all strongly urged people to use the standardized common names.
The fifth edition of the SSAR list (Crother et al., 2000) revived the
committee format, with specialist subcommittees for each major group. The
fifth edition included an expanded set of rules for common names and most
significantly added referenced annotations to explain taxonomic changes and
English names. In addition to these changes, we began to use a novel protocol
to differentiate dates of appearance of a species name from dates of publication.
For example, for Gastrophryne olivacea the dates given were 1857 1856. The
quotation marks indicated that the date printed on the publication was 1856, but
the publication actually appeared in 1857. An update of the fifth edition was
published in 2003 (Crother et al., 2003) and the sixth edition (Crother, 2008; a
note on this citation, the committee decided to treat the volume as edited and
thus the absence of et al.) continued with the same format. The first web
edition came online in 2011 and is considered a modification of the sixth edition.
As updates occur to the online edition, the edition number will change from
6.0 to 6.1, 6.2, etc., until the 7th edition, then the online updated editions will
change from 7.0 to 7.1, etc. One other change incorporated since the SSAR fifth
edition was a move away from calling the relevant names common names.
Instead, for North America north of Mexico the names are called English names
to acknowledge that common names exist in various languages. Thus, in a recent
list on names of Mexican amphibians and reptiles (Liner and Casas-Andreu,
2008), both standard English and Spanish names were given. A companion
Herp Circular with standard French names (Green, 2012) was published
simultaneously using the scientific names in this edition. Like the SSAR
editions one through four, we also encourage workers to use these standard
names for members of the North American herpetofauna.
It has been the hope that providing standardized names would create
consistency in usage across professions, from zoos and museums and field
guides, to government agencies and scholarly publications. Towards this end,
a number of societies have sanctioned the recent lists. The fifth and sixth
editions were published by SSAR, but these lists were also sanctioned by
the Herpetologists League (HL) and the American Society of Ichthyologists
and Herpetologists (ASIH). The seventh edition list is sanctioned by the
aforementioned three societies as well as the Canadian Association of
Herpetologists, Canadian Amphibian and Reptile Conservation Network, and
Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation. With such broad support from
the scientific and conservation community in North America it is hoped that
greater consistency of name usage will be achieved.
Because the data are available from the various names lists, it seemed
like an interesting exercise to compare species numbers across time. The table
below compares numbers of species recognized by Yarrow (1882), Collins
et al. (1978) and Crother (this list). The patterns are intriguing and no doubt
reflect the opposing forces of simple lumping and splitting practices as well as
the recognition of geographic variation causing synonymy of names and the
introduction of molecular data that revealed hidden lineages. In some cases
there has been a decrease in numbers of species since Yarrows (1882) list, as
in snakes, while in others there have been large increases in numbers, as in
salamanders and frogs.
Crocodilians
Turtles
Lizards
Snakes
Salamanders
Frogs
TOTALS
1882
2
49
105
181
63
65
465
1978
2
48
93
120
111
80
454
2012
2
59
120
155
194
102
632
1953
0
0
7
0
0
3
10
1990
1
0
23
1
0
4
29
2012
1
2
58
5
0
6
72
Citations of this list have varied greatly in format. To achieve uniformity the
committee agreed on the following format in which the authors of a subsection
are cited as the authors of a publication within the list as a whole. For example,
de Quieroz, K. and T. W. Reeder. 2012. Squamata Lizards. IN B. I. Crother
(ed.), Scientific and Standard English Names of Amphibians and Reptiles of
North America North of Mexico, With Comments Regarding Confidence In Our
Understanding pp. 3251. SSAR Herpetological Circular 39:1-92.
If the entire list is cited, it is treated as an edited volume using the following
format:
Crother, B. I. (ed.). 2012. Scientific and Standard English Names of Amphibians
and Reptiles of North America North of Mexico, With Comments Regarding
Confidence In Our Understanding. SSAR Herpetological Circular 39:1-92.
The task of compiling the information that goes into these publications
is not trivial. We encourage readers to please send us your reprints concerning
any taxonomic changes or decisions that your work may dictate or which may be
relevant to this list. Receiving your reprints will help ensure that future versions
of the list are as complete and up-to-date as possible.
Forming Standard English Names: Some Guidelines for Reptiles and Amphibians
RULES
Capitalization.
Standard English names of species should be capitalized to distinguish them
from descriptions and generalized usage. For example, I collected a Green
Frog (Lithobates clamitans) versus I saw a green frog. When group names
(i.e. standard English names for genera and higher categories or as a word or
words that applies to one or more species) are used alone (i.e., not as part of the
English name of a species) they should not be capitalized. For example, The
Western Diamond-backed Rattlesnake is a well known species of rattlesnake.
Or, I hear that racerunners are difficult to catch.
Formation of descriptive or modifying word.
1. When a descriptor refers to a feature of an animal, the suffix -ed will be
added. The modifying word will be treated as an adjective as opposed to a noun
in apposition.
Examples: Black-headed Snake, Red-eared Slider, Long-tailed
Salamander.
2. Hyphenation. The standard grammatical rule for joining two or more words
serving as a single adjective before a noun will be followed. The rule states that
a hyphen is more appropriately used to join the words in lieu of combining the
words.
Examples: Black-masked Racer, not Blackmasked Racer; Blackheaded Snake, not Blackheaded Snake; Long-tailed Salamander, not Longtailed
Salamander.
Exception: When one of the words describes a location, geographic region, or
direction, a hyphen is not used.
Examples: Blue Ridge Two-lined Salamander, Southern Red-backed
Salamander, Florida Red-bellied Turtle.
Formation and Use of Group Names.
1. Compound names should be spelled as a single word, unhyphenated, if:
A. The second component is from among the words frog, toad, snake,
turtle, tortoise, lizard, salamander, newt, siren.
Examples: Ratsnake, Coralsnake, Treefrog
B. The second component refers to a part of the body.
Examples: Cottonmouth, Copperhead, Whiptail, Softshell, Spadefoot
C. The name describes an activity of the animal.
Examples: Racerunner, Pondslider, Bloodsucker
D. The second component is a misnomer.
Examples: Waterdog, Hellbender, Mudpuppy, Coachwhip
Exceptions: Names that would ordinarily be spelled as single unhyphenated
words under the above rules should be spelled as separate words with both
capitalized when:
A. Spelling as a single word would result in an awkward double or triple letter
series.
Example: Wall Lizard, not Walllizard
B. A single word would be excessively long (over three syllables), or
awkward, or imply an incorrect pronunciation.
Examples: Tiger Salamander, not Tigersalamander (any combination
with salamander can be ruled as too long); Earless Lizard, not Earlesslizard
2. Compound names that are not spelled as a single word should have each word
capitalized.
Examples: Box Turtle, Rosy Boa, Cricket Frog
3. A group name may be applied to two or more distantly related groups.
4. Group names of more than one word should neither be encouraged nor
discouraged.
14. Two or more English names may be used within a single genus. For
LITERATURE CITED
Collins, J. T. 1990. Standard common and current scientific names for North
American amphibians and reptiles. Third Edition. SSAR Herpetological Circular
19: 1-41.
Collins, J. T. 1997. Standard common and current scientific names for North
American amphibians and reptiles. Fourth Edition. SSAR Herpetological
Circular 25: 1-40.
Collins, J. T., R. Conant, J. E. Huheey, J. L. Knight, E. M. Rundquist, and H.
M. Smith. 1982. Standard common and current scientific names for North
American amphibians and reptiles. Second Edition. SSAR Herpetological
Circular 12: 1-28.
Collins, J. T., J. E. Huheey, J. L. Knight, and H. M. Smith. 1978. Standard
common and current scientific names for North American amphibians and
reptiles. First Edition. SSAR Herpetological Circular 7: 1-36.
Conant, R., F. R. Cagle, C. J. Goin, C. H. Lowe, W. T. Neill, M. G. Netting, K.
P. Schmidt, C. E. Shaw, and R. C. Stebbins. 1956. Common names for North
American amphibians and reptiles. Copeia 1956: 172-185.
Cope, E. D. 1875. Checklist of North American Batrachia and Reptilia. Bulletin
of the United States National Museum 1: 1-54.
10
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Kraig Adler, Alvin Breisch, Robert Hansen, Larry Jones, Jeff Rowell, and Richard
Tracy are thanked for bringing discussion, corrections and information to our
attention.
11
AnuraFrogs
Darrel R. Frost1, Roy W. McDiarmid2, Joseph R. Mendelson III3 and David
M. Green4
Division of Vertebrate Zoology (Herpetology), American Museum of Natural
History, Central Park West at 79th Street, New York, NY 10024-5192
2
USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Smithsonian Institution
PO Box 37012, National Museum of Natural History, Room 378, MRC 111
Washington, DC 20013-7012
3
Herpetology, Zoo Atlanta, 800 Cherokee Avenue, S.E., Atlanta, GA 30315-1440
4
Redpath Museum, McGill University, 859 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal, QC
H3A 2K6, Canada
Gamble et al. (2008, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 48: 112125) recognized Acris blanchardi
as distinct from A. crepitans on the basis of molecular evidence (and included Acris
crepitans paludicola as a synonym of A. blanchardi), although McCallum and Trauth
(2006, Zootaxa 1104: 121) previously rejected the distinctiveness of A. c. blanchardi
from A. c. crepitans on the basis of morphology.
Two nominal subspecies occasionally are recognized, although whether they are arbitrary
or historical units has not been adequately investigated. However, the molecular data
presented by Gamble et al. (2008, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 48: 112-125) provide a good
starting point.
as were a number of other taxa) by Frost et al. (2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 297)
as a revision to render a monophyletic taxonomy and with genera delimited to be more
compact than the unwieldy Bufo. The recent phylogenetic study of bufonids by Van
Bocxlaer et al. (2010, Science 327: 679682) also suggests that New World Bufo do not
form a monophyletic group. Smith and Chiszar (2006, Herpetol. Conserv. Biol. 1: 6-8)
recommend retaining the North American taxa Anaxyrus, Incilius, and Rhinella (as well
as such long-recognized extralimital taxa such as Ansonia, Capensibufo, Crepidophryne,
Didynamipus, Mertensophryne, Nectophryne, Nectophrynoides, Pedostibes, Pelophryne,
Schismaderma, Werneria, and Wolterstorffina) as subgenera of Bufo to obviate the need
for generic changes in North American species. This approach, though, would visit
considerable nomenclatural instability on many countries outside of the USA and Canada.
See Pauly et al. (2009, Herpetologica 65: 115128) and Frost et al. (Herpetologica 65:
136153) for discussion.
12
A. americanus (Holbrook, 1836)American Toad
Geographic variation has been insufficiently studied, although careful evaluation of call
and/or molecular data might provide considerable evidence of divergent lineages. See
comments under A. baxteri, A. fowleri, A. hemiophrys, A. terrestris, and A. woodhousii.
Masta et al. (2002, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 24: 302314) provided evidence that suggests
that A. a. charlesmithi may be a distinct species.
See Schuierer (1963, Herpetologica 18: 262267). Two nominal subspecies are generally
recognized, although Goebel (2005, In Lannoo, M. [ed.], Amphibian Declines, Univ.
California Press, pp. 210211) discussed geographic variation and phylogenetics of
the A. boreas (as the Bufo boreas) group (i.e., A. boreas, A. canorus, A. exsul, and A.
nelsoni), and noted other unnamed populations of nominal A. boreas that may be species.
Populations in Alberta, Canada, assigned to A. boreas have a distinct breeding call and
vocal sacs (Cook, 1983, Publ. Nat. Sci. Natl. Mus. Canada 3); the taxonomic implications
of this warrant investigation. Goebel et al. (2009, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 50: 209225)
suggested on the basis of molecular evidence that nominal Anaxyrus boreas is a complex
of species (as suggested previously by Bogert, 1960, Animal Sounds Commun.: 179) that
do not conform to the traditional limits of taxonomic species and subspecies (and which
we do not recognize here for this reason) and that some populations assigned to this taxon
may actually be more closely related to Anaxyrus canorus and A. nelsonia problem that
calls for additional elucidation.
See account (as Bufo microscaphus californicus) by Price and Sullivan (1988, Cat. Am.
Amph. Rept. 415). See also Gergus (1998, Herpetologica 54: 317325) for justification
for this to be considered a distinct species from Anaxyrus microscaphus.
Reviewed by Karlstrom (1973, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 132) as Bufo canorus. See
comment under A. boreas.
Reviewed by Krupa (1990, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 457) as Bufo cognatus.
A. debilis (Girard, 1854) Chihuahuan Green Toad
See accounts in Sanders and Smith (1951, Field and Laboratory 19: 141160) and by
Bogert (1962, Am. Mus. Novit. 2100) as Bufo debilis. The nominal subspecies are
unlikely to be anything other than arbitrarily defined sections of clines although this
remains to be investigated adequately.
Green (1996, Israel J. Zool. 42: 95109) discussed the problem of interspecific
13
See comment under A. baxteri. Cook (1983, Publ. Nat. Sci. Natl. Mus. Canada 3)
regarded A. hemiophrys and A. americanus as forming very distinctive subspecies of one
species, although subsequent authors (e.g., Green and Pustowka, 1997, Herpetologica 53:
218228) have regarded the contact zone between these taxa as a hybrid zone between
two species.
Reviewed by Brown (1973, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 133) as Bufo houstonensis.
See account by Price and Sullivan (1988, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 415) as Bufo
microscaphus. See comment under A. californicus. Formerly included A. californicus and
A. mexicanus (extralimital) as subspecies, both of which were recognized as species by
Gergus (1998, Herpetologica 54: 317325).
Stebbins (1985, A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians, Houghton Mifflin,
Boston) and Altig et al. (1998, Contemp. Herpetol. Inform. Serv. 2) regarded A. nelsoni as
a species, rather than a subspecies of A. boreas. See comment under A. boreas.
Reviewed by Korky (1999, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 1104) as Bufo punctatus.
Reviewed by Ashton and Franz (1979, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 222) as Bufo quercicus.
Reviewed by Hulse (1978, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 207) as Bufo retiformis.
Older literature confused this species with A. cognatus, A. mexicanus (extralimital), and
A. compactilis (extralimital). Rogers (1972, Copeia 1972: 381383) demonstrated its
morphological distinctiveness.
No reports of geographic variation exist in the literature, although extensive geographic
variation is evident on examination of specimens. Hybridization with A. americanus
along the Fall Line may have strong effects on geographic variation, although data on this
have not been published. Reviewed by Blem (1979, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 223) as Bufo
terrestris.
See comments under A. fowleri. The unjustified emendation of the species name to
woodhousei has been used widely. The status of taxa recognized by Sanders (1987, Evol.
Hybrid. Spec. N. Am. Indig. Bufonids) has not been evaluated closely by any author,
although neither have they enjoyed any recognition. Evidence provided by Masta et
14
al. (2002, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 24: 302314) suggests that A. w. australis may be a
See Nelson et al. (2001, Evolution 55: 147160) for evidence supporting the recognition
of this species distinct from A. truei.
See Metter (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 69) for review (as including A. montanus).
This taxon of predominantly Mexican and Central American frogs was removed from a
paraphyletic Eleutherodactylus by Crawford and Smith (2005, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol.
35: 536555).
Reviewed by Zweifel (1967, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 41) as Eleutherodactylus augusti.
Goldberg et al. (2004, Herpetologica 60: 312320) suggested that C. a. cactorum and C.
a. latrans are different species but did not execute a formal taxonomic change.
See Craugastor. Frost et al. (2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 297) recognized
Syrrhophus for a monophyletic group containing E. cystignathoides, E. guttilatus, and
E. marnocki and Euhyas for a group containing E. planirostris. Heinicke et al. (2007,
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 104: 1009297) and Hedges et al. (2008, Zootaxa 1737:
1-182) redelimited Eleutherodactylus as monophyletic by exclusion of a number of South
American taxa and treated (and redelimited) Euhyas and Syrrhophus as subgenera of
Eleutherodactylus.
Two nominal subspecies named, of which only one of which enters the USA. The status
of these taxa, whether they represent arbitrarily delimited parts of a single population or
different lineages is unknown.
See account by Lynch (1970, Univ. Kansas Publ. Mus. Nat. Hist. 20: 145). Geographic
variation is not well studied.
15
Reviewed by Nelson (1972, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 120); details of distribution in Nelson
(1972, J. Herpetol. 6: 125128).
Reviewed by Nelson (1972, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 122); details of distribution given
by Nelson (1972, J. Herpetol. 6: 129130). Cryptic species possible given the extensive
distribution of this species.
Faivovich et al. (2005, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 294) redelimited this monophyletic
taxon to include only North American and Eurasian species. Hua et al. (2009,
Herpetologica 65: 246259) discussed relationships within the group.
Reviewed by Gosner and Black (1967, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 54). The widely disjunct
populations have been examined with allozymes and only subtle (no fixed differences)
geographic variation was documented (Karlin et al., 1982, Copeia 1982: 175178).
Barber (1999, Mol. Ecol. 8: 563576) examined geographic variation and suggested that
at least two other species should be recognized within the Mexican component of its
range.
Smith (1953, Herpetologica 9: 169173) discussed geographic variation and recognized
two nominal subspecies. Whether these represent arbitrary or historical units is unknown.
For discussion see Smith (1966, Cat. Am. Rept. Amph. 28).
See comment under H. versicolor. Reviewed by Hoffman (1988, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept.
436).
16
Hypopachus
Keferstein, 1867Sheep Frogs
H. variolosus (Cope, 1866)Sheep Frog
See Nelson (1973, Herpetologica 29: 617; 1974, Herpetologica 30: 250274) for
discussion of geographic variation and rejection of subspecies. Although only two species
are currently recognized within this genus, very strong geographic variation in coloration,
call, and toe structure suggests that several species are masquerading under this particular
name. Given that the type locality of H. variolosus is in Costa Rica, one can look forward
to the scientific name applied to the U.S. form to change.
This taxon of predominantly Central American toads was recently removed from a
paraphyletic Bufo by Frost et al. (2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 297; as Cranopsis).
However, the oldest name for this taxon is Incilius Cope, 1863 (see Frost et al., 2009,
Copeia 2009: 418419) which therefore takes precedence. See comment under Anaxyrus.
Van Bocxlaer et al. (2010, Science, 327: 679682) presented evidence that Incilius may
be paraphyletic with respect to Anaxyrus due to the placement of one extralimital species.
Reviewed by Fouquette (1970, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 93) as Bufo alvarius.
Mulcahy and Mendelson (2000, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 17: 173) recognized this species,
as Bufo nebulifer, and as distinct from I. valliceps, an extralimital species.
Reviewed by Heyer et al. (2006, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 830). Much of the older literature
about this species refers to it incorrectly as Leptodactylus labialis.
This taxon of North, Central, and South American frogs was removed from the large
and predominantly Eurasian genus Rana by Frost et al. (2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat.
Hist., 297). Hillis and Wilcox (2005, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 34: 299314) provided
a phylogenetic taxonomy that retained the species now under Lithobates within Rana
and restricted the use of that name to a small part of what was subsequently assigned to
Lithobates by Frost et al. (2006). Dubois (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 42: 317330)
criticized the nomenclatural proposals of Hillis and Wilcox and regarded their names
as nomina nuda and their approach outside of the International Code of Zoological
Nomenclature (1999). This criticism was responded to by Hillis (2006, Mol. Phylogenet.
Evol. 42: 331338), who argued that most of the new names proposed by Hillis and
Wilcox do have nomenclatural status under the International Code of Zoological
Nomenclature (1999). The revision by Che et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 42: 113)
which recognized Lithobates as a genus, we think best reflects the majority opinion of
members of the international community who are actively working on large-scale ranid
relationships, although Hillis, 2007 (Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 42: 331-338) ) and Wiens
et al. (2009, Evolution 63: 12171231) expressed reluctance to accept this taxonomy.
Dubois (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 42: 317330; 2007, Cladistics 23: 390402),
Hillis (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 42: 331-338), Pauly et al. (2009, Herpetologica
65: 115128), Frost et al. (2009, Herpetologica, 65: 136153) have discussed the issues
surrounding the nomenclature of North American ranids.
17
See comment under L. capito. Reviewed by Altig and Lohoefener (1983, Cat. Am. Amph.
Rept. 324) as Rana areolata. Geographic variation deserves further study to determine
status of the nominal subspecies.
Geographic variation is not well documented and relationships with extralimital Mexican
forms (e.g., L. forreri, L. brownorum) are not well understood.
L. blairi (Mecham, Littlejohn, Oldham, Brown, and Brown, 1973)Plains
Leopard Frog
Reviewed by Brown (1992, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 536) as Rana blairi. Isolated western
populations have not been well studied.
The status of southern Arizona and Mexican populations needs study. Rana
subaquavocalis Platz, 1993, is a synonym according to Goldberg et al. (2004, J. Herpetol.
38: 313319), although some authors (e.g., Hillis and Wilcox, 2005, Mol. Phylogenet.
Evol. 34: 299314; Dubois, 2006, C. R. Biol., Paris 329: 823840) have continued to
recognize the two taxa as distinct species, without comment. See comment under L.
fisheri.
The status of the nominal subspecies requires investigation to determine whether they are
arbitrary or evolutionary units. Reviewed by Stewart (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 337)
as Rana clamitans. Austin and Zamudio (2008, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 48: 1041-1053)
reported on interpopulational variation at the molecular level and suggested an historical
structure inconsistent with the recognized subspecies, which are here rejected on that
basis.
Until recently, this species has been considered to be highly restricted in range and
extinct. However, Hekkala et al. (2011. Conserv. Genet. DOI 10.1007/s10592-011-02296) used DNA sequence data from museum specimens to show that L. fisheri and frogs
ascribed to R. chiricahuensis from near the Mogollon Rim in central Arizona comprise
a lineage that is distinct from R. chiricahuensis populations to the south and east.
Platz (1993, J. Herpetol. 27: 154162) previously noted the various lines of evidence
suggesting that L. chiricahuensis was composed of more than one species, with the
central Arizona population notably distinctive, but it was not possible, at that time, to
compare those frogs genetically with L. fisheri.
Reviewed by Altig and Lohoefener (1982, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 286), as Rana grylio.
18
L. heckscheri (Wright, 1924)River Frog
Reviewed by Sanders (1984, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 348) as Rana heckscheri.
Reviewed by Moler (1993, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 561) as Rana okaloosae. Austin et al.
(2003, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 80: 601624) discussed the genetic relationship of L. okaloosae
and L. clamitans.
The status of this taxon is controversial. Jaeger et al. (2001, Copeia 2001: 339351),
noted a close relationship with L. yavapaiensis, and Pfeiler and Markow (2008, Mol.
Phylogenet. Evol. 49: 343-348) reported evidence consistent with a close or identical
relationship with L. yavapaiensis. Reviewed by Jennings (1988, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept.
417) as Rana onca.
Geographic variation studied by Pace (1974, Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan
148). Reviewed by Schaaf and Smith (1971, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 117) as Rana
palustris. Newman, Feinberg, Rissler, Burger, and Shaffer, 2012, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol.,
63: 445455, noted, but did not name, a previously undetected species, the apparent
sister taxon of L. palustris, with a range of northern New Jersey, through New York City,
likely to western Connecticut, USA. Obviously the genetic variation among populations
of nominal L. palustris needs additional sampling to see what congruences can be found
with the earlier work of Schaaf and Smith, 1970, Herpetologica, 26: 240254.
Synonymy and discussion in Pace (1974, Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan 148) as
Rana pipiens.
Reviewed by Hedeen (1977, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 202) as Rana septentrionalis.
Reviewed by Altig and Lohoefener (1983, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 324) as Rana areolata
sevosa. Recognized as distinct from L. capito and L. areolatus by Young and Crother
(2001, Copeia, 2001: 382388).
Pace (1974, Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan 148) revived the older name Rana
utricularius Harlan, 1825, for this species, which Pace emended to R. utricularia.
Subsequently, the International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature moved
(Opinion, 1685, 1992, Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 49: 171173) to suppress R. utricularia
for purposes of priority in favor of R. sphenocephala, leaving the unusual situation
of the subspecies name sphenocephalus having priority over the older species name,
utricularius. The status of the nominal subspecies requires detailed examination (see
Brown et al., 1977, Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 33: 199200; Zug, 1982, Bull. Zool. Nomencl.
39: 8081; and Uzzell, 1982, Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 39: 83).
The extensive morphological variation in this species was examined by Martof and
Humphries (1959, Amer. Midl. Nat. 61: 350389), who rejected previously recognized
taxonomic divisions; however a study of DNA sequence variation by Lee-Yaw et al.
(2008, Mol. Ecol. 17: 867884) revealed two distinct clades corresponding to eastern
and western populations. Reviewed by Martof (1970, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 86) as Rana
sylvatica.
19
Extinct in the USA although persisting in Mexico. Attempts are being made to
reintroduce the species into former Arizona localities. Reviewed by Zweifel (1968, Cat.
Am. Amph. Rept. 66) as Rana tarahumarae.
Reviewed by Gosner and Black (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 67) as Rana virgatipes.
Data provided by Pytel (1986, Herpetologica 42: 273282) suggest that careful
evaluation for cryptic species is warranted.
See comment under L. onca.
Lemmon et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 44: 10681082) revised the P. nigrita
group (P. brimleyi, P. brachyphona, P. clarkii, P. feriarum, P. kalmi, P. maculata, and
P. triseriata and an unnamed species, which was subsequently named as Pseudacris
fouquettei).
Reviewed by Gaudin (1979, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 225) as Hyla cadaverina. Phillipsen
and Metcalf (2009, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 53: 152170) reported on considerable
geographic structure at the molecular level among populations.
Reviewed by Pierce and Whitehurst (1990, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 458).
Moriarty and Cannatella (2004, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 30: 409420) rejected subspecies.
See comment under P. kalmi.
P. fouquettei Lemmon, Lemmon, Collins, and Cannatella, 2008Cajun
Chorus Frog
P. hypochondriaca (Hallowell, 1854)Baja California Treefrog
Recuero et al. (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39: 293304) recognized this species as
distinct from P. regilla and composed of two subspecies, one of which is extralimital, and
whose mutual status is unclear.
Moriarty and Cannatella (2004, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 30: 409420) discussed the
arguable distinctiveness of this taxon with respect to Pseudacris streckeri.
Platz (1989, Copeia 1989: 704712) retained P. feriarum and P. kalmi as subspecies
of one species but suggested that they might also be distinct species on the basis of
data presented by Hedges (1986, Syst. Zool. 35: 121). Lemmon et al. (2007, Mol.
Phylogenet. Evol. 44: 10681082) confirmed that P. kalmi and P. feriarum are distinct
species although the contact zone between these taxa is poorly understood.
20
P. maculata (Agassiz, 1850)Boreal Chorus Frog
Considered a species distinct from P. triseriata by Platz (1989, Copeia 1989: 704712).
Lemmon et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 44: 10681082) revised the geographic
limits of this species based on mitochondrial DNA evidence.
Reviewed by Gates (1988, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 416). Subspecies rejected by Moriarty
and Cannatella (2004, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 30: 409420).
Reviewed by Franz and Chantell (1978, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 209) as Limnaoedus
ocularis.
For discussion see Harper (1937, Am. Midl. Nat. 18: 260272).
Recuero et al. (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39: 293304) redelimited this species and
revised its range.
Recognized as distinct from P. regilla by Recuero et al. (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39:
293304; 2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 41: 511).
Reviewed by Smith (1966, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 27). See comment under P. illinoensis.
See comment under P. maculata. Lemmon et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 44:
10681082) revised the geographic limits of this species based on mitochondrial DNA
evidence.
This large taxon of predominantly Eurasian frogs was redelimited by Frost et al. (2006,
Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 297, and Che et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 42: 113)
to exclude a number of taxa (e.g., Lithobates, Glandirana, Odorrana, Pelophylax).
See Lithobates for most North American species formerly associated with Rana and
comments regarding taxonomy.
Reviewed (in the sense of including R. draytonii) by Altig and Dumas (1972, Cat. Am.
Amph. Rept. 160). Evidence of the distinctiveness of this species from R. draytonii was
provided by Hayes and Miyamoto (1984, Copeia 1984: 10181022), Shaffer et al. (2004,
Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 13: 26672677), Conlon et al. (2006, Peptides 27: 13051312),
and Pauly et al. (2008, J. Herpetol. 42: 668679).
See Zweifel (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 71) for review. Molecular study of geographic
variation of this rapidly-disappearing species should prove illuminating.
Reviewed by Altig and Dumas (1971, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 105). The disjunct
populations should be investigated with respect to call and molecular parameters.
See comment under R. aurora.
Green et al. (1996, Evolution 50: 374390) and Cuellar (1996, Biogeographica 72: 145
150) suggested that R. pretiosa was composed of two sibling species. Subsequently Green
21
et al. (1997, Copeia 1997: 18) recognized the eastern and northern form, R. luteiventris,
as a species distinct from Rana pretiosa.
See Zweifel (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 65) for review. Vredenburg et al. (2007, J.
Zool. 271: 361374) discussed the systematics of this species and its disappearance from
large parts of its former range.
See comment under R. luteiventris.
Vredenburg et al. (2007, J. Zool. 271: 361374) recognized this species as distinct from
R. muscosa.
This genus of predominantly South American toads was recently redelimited by Chaparro
et al. (2007, Herpetologica 63: 203212) to reflect the phylogenetic results of Pramuk
(2006, Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 146: 407452). Van Bocxlaer et al. (2010, Science 327:
679682) suggested that Rhinella is only distantly related to North American toads of the
genera Incilius and Anaxyrus.
Reviewed by Easteal (1986, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 395) as Bufo marinus. Vallinoto
et al. (2010, Zool. Scripta 39: 128140) provided molecular evidence that the North
and Central American population may be a distinct species from the South American
populations (at least one of which bears the name R. marina), which suggests that the
name applied to the USA population likely will change as relationships become more
clear.
Geographic variation has not been studied in any detail and cryptic lineages are a
possibility. Reviewed by Fouquette (1969, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 78).
Reviewed by Wasserman (1970, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 85). Geographic variation is
poorly documented.
Reviewed by Wasserman (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 70) as Scaphiopus h. holbrookii.
Reviewed by Wasserman (1968, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 70) as Scaphiopus holbrookii
hurterii.
The content of this taxon was recently redelimited by Faivovich et al. (2005, Bull. Am.
Mus. Nat. Hist. 294) to include former Pternohyla.
22
S. fodiens (Boulenger, 1882)Lowland Burrowing Treefrog
Reviewed by Trueb (1969, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 77) as Pternohyla fodiens.
Tanner (1989, Great Basin Nat. 49: 3870) and Wiens and Titus (1991, Herpetologica
47: 2128) recognized Spea as distinct from Scaphiopus, within which it was previously
regarded as a subgenus.
Known to hybridize with S. multiplicata in parts of their ranges (Brown, 1976, Contrib.
Sci. Nat. Hist. Mus. Los Angeles Co. 286). Geographic variation is poorly documented.
This name formerly covered populations now referred to S. multiplicata and S.
intermontana until separated by Brown (1976, Contrib. Sci. Nat. Hist. Mus. Los Angeles
Co. 286). See Tanner (1989, Great Basin Nat. 49: 503510) for discussion, although he
continued to retain these species as subspecies of S. hammondi, a position rejected by
Wiens and Titus (1991, Herpetologica 47: 2138).
Geographic variation very poorly documented, and, according to evidence provided
by Titus and Wiens (1991, Herpetologica 47: 2129), this nominal species may be a
paraphyletic composite of at least two species. Reviewed by Hall (1999, Cat. Am. Amph.
Rept. 650).
Considered a species distinct from S. hammondii by Brown (1976, Contrib. Sci. Nat.
Hist. Mus. Los Angeles Co. 286) and by Titus and Wiens (1991, Herpetologica 47:
2128). Regarded, on the basis of overall similarity and paleoclimatic inference to be
conspecific with S. hammondii by Van Devender, Mead, and Rea (1991, Southwest. Nat.
36: 302314) and by Tanner (1989, Great Bas. Nat. 49: 503510). Tanner recognized S.
h. stagnalis Cope as the northern (Arizona to central Chihuahua) subspecies of his Spea
hammondii, though the phylogenetic evidence presented by Titus and Wiens indicated
it to be part of S. multiplicata. Geographic variation has not been carefully studied and
cryptic species are possible.
23
Caudata Salamanders
Stephen G. Tilley1 (Chair), Richard Highton2, David B. Wake3
Department of Biological Sciences, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063
Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742
3
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 3101 VLSB, University of California, Berkeley,
CA 94720-3160
1
Pauly, Piskurek and Shaffer (2006, Mol. Ecol. 16: 415429) recognized western
populations of A. cingulatum as a distinct species. They inadvertently reversed the
proposed vernacular name with that for A. cingulatum.
Pauly, Piskurek and Shaffer (2006, Mol. Ecol. 16: 415429) recognized western
populations of A. cingulatum as a distinct species (A. bishopi) and proposed a new
vernacular name for this species. They inadvertently reversed the proposed vernacular
name with that for A. bishopi.
Taxonomic recognition of hybrid, asexual forms that combine genomes of A. laterale,
A. texanum, A. tigrinum, and this species raises complex issues dealing with discordance
between cytoplasmic and nuclear genes, reticulate evolution, and genome-swapping
(Bogart, 2003, in Sever, D.M. [ed.], Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny of Urodela,
Science Publishers, Inc., Pp. 109134). Bi and Bogart (2010, BMC Evol. Biol. 10: 238)
confirm an ancient origin for the mitochondrial genome shared by asexual forms of this
complex.
See comment under A. jeffersonianum.
A. mabeei Bishop, 1928Mabees Salamander
A. macrodactylum Baird, 1850Long-toed Salamander
A. m. columbianum Ferguson, 1961Eastern Long-toed Salamander
A. m. croceum Russell and Anderson, 1956Santa Cruz Long-toed
Salamander
A. m. krausei Peters, 1882Northern Long-toed Salamander
A. m. macrodactylum Baird, 1850Western Long-toed Salamander
A. m. sigillatum Ferguson, 1961Southern Long-toed Salamander
A. maculatum (Shaw, 1802)Spotted Salamander
A. mavortium Baird, 1850 1849Western Tiger Salamander
Shaffer and McKnight (1996, Evolution 50: 417433) provided molecular phylogenetic
data indicating that the eastern and western tiger salamanders should be regarded
as distinct species and treated the western forms as subspecies of Ambystoma mavortium.
Lannoo (2005, in Lannoo M., [ed.], Amphibian Declines, Status of United States Species,
Univ. California Press, Pp. 636639) includes A. mavortium in A. tigrinum.
24
Rissler and Apodaca (2007, Syst. Biol. 56: 924942) conclude, on the basis of
mitochondrial DNA phylogeography and ecological niche modeling, that this taxon
should be subdivided into two or more species. Further studies are underway.
Jackman et al. (1997, Mol. Biol. and Evol. 14: 883891) resurrected Plethopsis (Bishop,
1937, Herpetologica 1: 93-95) as one of two subgenera in Batrachoseps and following
Wake et al. (2002, Copeia 20161028), Plethopsis includes B. campi, B. robustus and B.
wrightorum. All remaining species are members of the nominate subgenus.
25
B. incognitus Jockusch, Yanev, and Wake, 2001San Simeon Slender
Salamander
B. kawia Jockusch, Wake and Yanev, 1998Sequoia Slender Salamander
B. luciae Jockusch, Yanev, and Wake, 2001Santa Lucia Mountains
Slender Salamander
B. major Camp, 1915Southern California Slender Salamander
B. m. aridus Brame, 1970Desert Slender Salamander
B. m. major Camp, 1915Garden Salamander
B. minor Jockusch, Yanev, and Wake, 2001Lesser Slender Salamander.
B. nigriventris Cope, 1869Black-bellied Slender Salamander
B. pacificus (Cope, 1865)Channel Islands Slender Salamander
B. regius Jockusch, Wake and Yanev, 1998Kings River Slender
Salamander
B. relictus Brame and Murray, 1968Relictual Slender Salamander
B. robustus Wake, Yanev and Hansen, 2002Kern Plateau Salamander.
B. simatus Brame and Murray, 1968Kern Canyon Slender Salamander
B. stebbinsi Brame and Murray, 1968Tehachapi Slender Salamander
B. wrighti (Bishop, 1937)Oregon Slender Salamander
Cryptobranchus Leuckart, 1821HELLBENDERS
C. alleganiensis (Daudin, 1803)Hellbender
C. a. alleganiensis (Daudin, 1803)Eastern Hellbender
C. a. bishopi Grobman, 1943Ozark Hellbender
Desmognathus Baird, 1850DUSKY SALAMANDERS
D. abditus Anderson and Tilley, 2003Cumberland Dusky Salamander
D. aeneus Brown and Bishop, 1947Seepage Salamander
D. apalachicolae Means and Karlin, 1989Apalachicola Dusky
Salamander
D. auriculatus (Holbrook, 1838)Southern Dusky Salamander
Divergent mitochondrial DNA lineages occur among Atlantic Coastal Plain populations
that are morphologically assignable to this species. These lineages do not comprise a
monophyletic unit (Beamer and Lamb, 2008, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 47:143-153).
Molecular data indicate that this taxon and D. quadramaculatus may not be reciprocally
monophyletic (Rissler and Taylor, 2003, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 27: 197211; Kozak, et
al., 2005, Evolution 59: 20002016; Jones et al. 2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 38: 280287).
D. monticola Dunn, 1916Seal Salamander
26
D. ocoee Nicholls, 1949Ocoee Salamander
This form consists of numerous parapatric units that occupy different mountain ranges
in the southern Blue Ridge and Cumberland Plateau physiographic provinces and
probably represent distinct species (Tilley and Mahoney, 1996, Herpetol. Monogr. 10:
142; Tilley, 1997, J. Heredity 88: 305315; Highton, 2000, in R. C. Bruce, B. G.
Jaeger and L. D, Houck [eds.], The Biology of Plethodontid Salamanders. Kluwer
Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, Pp. 215241).
D. orestes Tilley and Mahoney, 1996Blue Ridge Dusky Salamander
This taxon consists of two genetically differentiated units that may represent cryptic
species (Tilley and Mahoney, 1996, Herpetol. Monogr. 10: 142; Tilley, 1997, J. Heredity
88: 305315; Highton, 2000, in R. C. Bruce, B. G. Jaeger and L. D, Houck [eds.], The
Biology of Plethodontid Salamanders. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York,
Pp. 215241).
D. organi Crespi, Brown, and Rissler, 2010Northern Pygmy Salamander
Removed from synonymy under D. fuscus (Martof and Rose, 1962, Copeia, 1962: 215216) by Tilley, Eriksen, and Katz (2008, Zool. J. Linnean Soc. 152:115-130).
See comment under D. marmoratus.
The taxonomy of this complex is controversial. Some authors would recognize from two
(e.g., Frost and Hillis, 1990, Herpetologica 46: 87104) to as many as 11 or more species
(e.g., Highton, 1998, Herpetologica 54: 254278), whereas others (e.g., Wake,
1997, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 94: 77617767; Wake and Schneider, 1998,
Herpetologica 54: 279298; Pereira and Wake, 2009, Evolution 68: 2288-2301)
consider evidence for evolutionary independence of segments of the complex to be
inadequate or equivocal. Narrow hybrid zones have been demonstrated to exist between
populations assigned to the subspecies xanthoptica and platensis, and between klauberi
and eschscholtzii, and one site of sympatry with no hybridization between the latter pair
has been reported (Wake et al., 1989, in D. Otte and J. A. Endler, [eds.], Speciation and
its Consequences, Sinauer, Pp. 134157). Broader zones of genetic admixture and
reticulation between units of the complex in many areas raise questions about
evolutionary independence, and borders of taxa are elusive.
27
28
Niemiller, et al. (2008, Molec. Ecol. 17: 2258-2275) provide molecular evidence
indicating that this form and G. palleucus have diverged very recently from G.
porphyriticus and are phylogenetically nested within populations referred to that species.
See comment under G. gulolineatus.
G. p. necturoides Lazell and Brandon, 1962Big Mouth Cave
Salamander
G. p. palleucus McCrady, 1954Pale Salamander
G. porphyriticus (Green, 1827)Spring Salamander
G. p. danielsi (Blatchley, 1901)Blue Ridge Spring Salamander
G. p. dunni Mittleman and Jopson, 1941Carolina Spring Salamander
G. p. duryi (Weller, 1930)Kentucky Spring Salamander
G. p. porphyriticus (Green, 1827)Northern Spring Salamander
G. subterraneus Besharse and Holsinger, 1977West Virginia Spring
Salamander
Haideotriton Carr, 1939GEORGIA BLIND SALAMANDERS
Considered a junior synonym of Eurycea by Dubois (2005, Alytes 23: 20). Frost et al.
(2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 297) argue that recognition of this morphologically
distinctive taxon renders Eurycea paraphyletic, but present no data. Pyron and Wiens
(2011, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 61: 543-583) show the taxon nested within Eurycea based
on partial cyt b sequences, but support levels are weak and available data cannot reject
the hypothesis that Haideotriton is the sister taxon of Eurycea. We continue to recognize
Haideotriton.
According to Bart et al. (1997, J. Herpetol. 31: 192201) this taxon may consist of more
than one species.
29
There is molecular and morphological evidence for distinct evolutionary lineages within
this taxon (Baird et al., 2006, Copeia 2006: 760768; Davis and Pauly, 2011, Copeia
2011: 103-112).
P. amplus Highton and Peabody, 2000Blue Ridge Gray-cheeked
Salamander
P. angusticlavius Grobman, 1944Ozark Zigzag Salamander
P. asupak Mead, Clayton, Nauman, Olson and Pfrender, 2005Scott Bar
Salamander
P. aureolus Highton, 1984Tellico Salamander
P. caddoensis Pope and Pope, 1951Caddo Mountain Salamander
P. chattahoochee Highton, 1989Chattahoochee Slimy Salamander
P. cheoah Highton and Peabody, 2000Cheoah Bald Salamander
P. chlorobryonis Mittleman, 1951Atlantic Coast Slimy Salamander
P. cinereus (Green, 1818)Eastern Red-backed Salamander
P. cylindraceus (Harlan, 1825)White-spotted Slimy Salamander
P. dorsalis Cope, 1889Northern Zigzag Salamander
P. dunni Bishop, 1934Dunns Salamander
P. electromorphus Highton, 1999Northern Ravine Salamander
P. elongatus Van Denburgh, 1916Del Norte Salamander
P. fourchensis Duncan and Highton, 1979Fourche Mountain Salamander
P. glutinosus (Green, 1818)Northern Slimy Salamander
P. grobmani Allen and Neill, 1949Southeastern Slimy Salamander
P. hoffmani Highton, 1972Valley and Ridge Salamander
P. hubrichti Thurow, 1957Peaks of Otter Salamander
P. idahoensis Slater and Slipp, 1940Coeur dAlene Salamander
30
P. jordani Blatchley, 1901Red-cheeked Salamander
P. kentucki Mittleman, 1951Cumberland Plateau Salamander
P. kiamichi Highton, 1989Kiamichi Slimy Salamander
P. kisatchie Highton, 1989Louisiana Slimy Salamander
P. larselli Burns, 1954Larch Mountain Salamander
P. meridianus Highton and Peabody, 2000South Mountain Gray-cheeked
Salamander
P. metcalfi Brimley, 1912Southern Gray-cheeked Salamander
P. mississippi Highton, 1989Mississippi Slimy Salamander
P. montanus Highton and Peabody, 2000Northern Gray-cheeked
Salamander
P. neomexicanus Stebbins and Riemer, 1950Jemez Mountains
Salamander
P. nettingi Green, 1938Cheat Mountain Salamander
P. ocmulgee Highton, 1989Ocmulgee Slimy Salamander
P. ouachitae Dunn and Heinze, 1933Rich Mountain Salamander
P. petraeus Wynn, Highton and Jacobs, 1988Pigeon Mountain
Salamander
P. punctatus Highton, 1972Cow Knob Salamander
P. richmondi Netting and Mittleman, 1938Southern Ravine Salamander
P. savannah Highton, 1989Savannah Slimy Salamander
P. sequoyah Highton, 1989Sequoyah Slimy Salamander
P. serratus Grobman, 1944Southern Red-backed Salamander
P. shenandoah Highton and Worthington, 1967Shenandoah Salamander
P. sherando Highton, 2004Big Levels Salamander
P. shermani Stejneger, 1906Red-legged Salamander
P. stormi Highton and Brame, 1965Siskiyou Mountains Salamander
P. teyahalee Hairston, 1950Southern Appalachian Salamander
P. vandykei Van Denburgh, 1906Van Dykes Salamander
P. variolatus (Gilliams, 1818)South Carolina Slimy Salamander
P. vehiculum (Cooper, 1860)Western Red-backed Salamander
P. ventralis Highton, 1997Southern Zigzag Salamander
P. virginia Highton, 1999Shenandoah Mountain Salamander
P. websteri Highton, 1979Websters Salamander
P. wehrlei Fowler and Dunn, 1917Wehrles Salamander
P. welleri Walker, 1931Wellers Salamander
P. yonahlossee Dunn, 1917Yonahlossee Salamander
Pseudobranchus Gray, 1825DWARF SIRENS
P. axanthus Netting and Goin, 1942Southern Dwarf Siren
P. a. axanthus Netting and Goin, 1942Narrow-striped Dwarf Siren
P. a. belli Schwartz, 1952Everglades Dwarf Siren
P. striatus (LeConte, 1824)Northern Dwarf Siren
P. s. lustricolus Neill, 1951Gulf Hammock Dwarf Siren
P. s. spheniscus Goin and Crenshaw, 1949Slender Dwarf Siren
P. s. striatus (LeConte, 1824)Broad-striped Dwarf Siren
31
The status of the two distantly allopatric populations (see Flores-Villela and Brandon,
1992, Ann. Carnegie Mus. 61: 289291) in (1) south Texas and adjacent Mexico and (2)
peninsular Florida is unclear and deserves evaluation.
32
Squamata Lizards
Kevin de Quieroz1 (Chair) and Tod W. Reeder2
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560-0162
2
Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182
Taxonomy for Anniella follows Hunt (1983, Copeia 1983: 7989), with nomenclatural
modifications (ICZN, 1993, Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 50: 186187) and elimination of
subspecies (de Queiroz et al., 2003, pages 198-201 in Crother et al., 2003, Herp. Review
34:196-203) based on the data of Pearse and Pogson (2000, Evolution 54: 10411046).
Parham and Papenfuss (2009, Conserv. Genet. 10:169-179) presented evidence from
mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences for the existence of five lineages within
Anniella pulchra that are, or were historically, evolving separately. The members of
some of those lineages differ in coloration, and those of others differ in karyotype.
Ongoing studies by the same authors are aimed at clarifying the systematics of the five
lineages.
Taxonomy for Anolis follows Williams (1976, Breviora 440: 121) with addition of
subspecies from Schwartz and Henderson (1991, Amphibians and Reptiles of the West
Indies, University of Florida Press) and modifications by Vance (1991, Bull. Maryland
Herpetol. Soc. 27: 4389; description of A. carolinensis seminolus). Some authors (e.g.,
Guyer and Savage, 1986, Syst. Zool. 35: 509531; 1992, Syst. Biol. 41: 89110; Savage
and Guyer, 1989, Amphibia-Reptilia 10: 105116) divide Anolis into the following five
genera: Anolis, Ctenonotus, Dactyloa, Norops, and Xiphosurus (=Semiurus); however,
according to the analysis of Poe (2004, Herpetol. Monogr. 18: 3789), only Norops is
monophyletic among these five taxa. Other authors (e.g., Nicholson, 2002, Herpetol.
Monogr. 16: 93120; Brandley and de Queiroz, 2004, Herpetol. Monogr. 18: 90126;
Castaeda and de Queiroz, in press, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol.) have used the name Anolis
for the more inclusive clade, applying the other names to various Anolis subclades
(sometimes with different circumscriptions). We have included names of subclades
parenthetically, where applicable.
A. carolinensis (Voigt, 1832)Green Anole
A. c. carolinensis (Voigt, 1832)Northern Green Anole
A. c. seminolus Vance, 1991Southern Green Anole
A. (Ctenonotus) distichus Cope, 1861Bark Anole
33
Taxonomy for Aspidoscelis follows Maslin and Secoy (1986, Contrib. Zool. Univ.
Colorado Mus. 1: 160) and Wright (1993, in J. W. Wright and L. J. Vitt [eds.], Biology
of Whiptail Lizards [Genus Cnemidophorus], Oklahoma Mus. Nat. Hist., Pp. 2781) with
modifications by Camp (1916, Univ. California Pub. Zool. 17: 6374; proposal of A. t.
munda as a replacement name for the invalid name A. (t.) undulata Hallowell 1854),
Maslin and Walker (1981, Am. Midl. Nat. 105: 8492; treatment of A. t. stejnegeri as
the name of the subspecies of A. tigris occurring in coastal southern California), Collins
(1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 4243; treatment of A. xanthonota as a separate species
from A. burti), Dessauer and Cole (1991, Copeia 1991: 622637; recognition of
A. marmorata (tigris) reticuloriens), Trauth (1992, Texas J. Sci. 44: 437443; description
of A. sexlineata stephensae), Wright and Lowe (1993, J. Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci.
27: 129157; descriptions of A. inornatus gypsi, A. i. junipera, A. i. llanuras, and A. i.
pai), Trauth (1995, Bull. Chicago Herpetol. Soc. 30: 68; spelling of A. sexlineata
stephensae), Smith et al. (1996, Herpetol. Rev. 27: 129; priority of the names A. scalaris
and A. semifasciata over A. septemvittata and A. sericea and precedence of A. scalaris
over A. semifasciata and A. septemvittata over A. sericea), Taylor and Walker (1996,
Copeia 1996: 140148; synonymy of A. t. gracilis with A. t. tigris, and use of the name A.
t. punctilinealis for the taxon formerly called A. t. gracilis), Walker et al. (1997,
Herpetologica 53: 233259; restriction of the name A. tesselata to the diploid members
of the species formerly referred to by that name and recognition of the species A.
neotesselata for the triploid members), Collins (1997, SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 25;
recognition of A. arizonae and A. pai [but not A. gypsi] as species); ICZN (1999, Bull.
Zool. Nomencl. 56: 162163) precedence of the name A. neomexicana over A. perplexa;
Reeder et al. (2002, Am. Mus. Novit. 3365: 161; use of Aspidoscelis for a clade
containing all of the whiptail species native to North America), and those described in
additional notes below. Maslin and Secoy (op. cit.) and Wright (op. cit.) are the sources
for information on reproductive mode. A tetraploid parthenogenetic species of
Aspidoscelis has been generated in the laboratory by hybridization of A. exanguis and A.
inornata (Lutes et al., 2011, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 108: 9910-9915), but it has not
been named.
A. exsanguis (Lowe, 1956)Chihuahuan Spotted Whiptail (unisexual)
A. flagellicauda (Lowe and Wright, 1964)Gila Spotted Whiptail
(unisexual)
A. gularis (Baird and Girard, 1852)Common Spotted Whiptail
See comment under A. scalaris.
A. g. gularis (Baird and Girard, 1852)Texas Spotted Whiptail
A. hyperythra (Cope, 1863)Orange-throated Whiptail
A. h. beldingi (Stejneger, 1894)Beldings Orange-throated Whiptail
34
According to previous taxonomies (e.g., Maslin and Secoy, 1986, Contrib. Zool. Univ.
Colorado Mus. 1: 160; Wright, 1993, in J. W. Wright and L. J. Vitt [eds.], Biology of
Whiptail Lizards [Genus Cnemidophorus], Oklahoma Mus. Nat. Hist., Pp. 2781), the
subspecies Aspidoscelis hyperythra beldingi occurs in the United States. Grismer
(1999, Herpetologica 55: 2842) did not recognize subspecies of A. hyperythra; however,
his decision seems to have been based at least partly on a philosophical opposition
to the recognition of subspecies, though he also stated that Welsh (1988, Proc.
California Acad. Sci. 46: 172) had previously synonymized the names A. h. beldingi
and A. h. schmidti with A. h. hyperythra. In reality, Welsh (op. cit.) did not formally
synonymize any of the names in question. Instead, he suggested that differentiation was
insufficient to warrant the recognition of three distinct races (which he nevertheless
recognized) and that central Baja California was an area of intergradation between A.
h. beldingi and A. h. hyperythra. He also referred specimens from the Sierra San
Pedro Mrtir region to A. h. schmidti. If A. h. schmidti represents the intergrading
populations, then this form extends from the northern Sierra San Pedro Mrtir region
(3058N; Welsh, op. cit.) to San Ignacio (2717N; Linsdale, 1932, Univ. California
Pub. Zool. 38: 345386), which is roughly one-third of the total range of the species
(see Grismer, op. cit.). Given such an extensive area of intergradation, it seems
reasonable to interpret the previously recognized taxa as morphotypes rather than
subspecies. On the other hand, Wright (1994, in P. R. Brown and J. W. Wright [eds.],
Herpetology of the North American Deserts, Southwestern Herpetologists Society, Pp.
255271) had previously identified a diagnostic color pattern difference between A.
h. hyperythra and A. h. beldingi (he considered A. h. schmidti a synonym of A. h.
beldingi) and placed the zone of intergradation between the two subspecies in southern
Baja California (see also Thompson et al., 1998, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 655). Grismer
(op. cit.) did not address this difference, and we have therefore retained the two
subspecies.
Wright and Lowe (1993, J. Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci. 27: 129157) recognized
six subspecies of Aspidoscelis inornata in the United States. Collins (1997,
SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 25), treated three of them, arizonae, gypsi, and pai, as
separate species (but see note on A. i. gypsi), presumably because they are
geographically separated and morphologically distinguishable both from one
another and from the other subspecies of A. inornata recognized by Wright and
Lowe (op. cit.).
Rosenblum and Harmon (2010, Evolution 65: 946960), in a study based on nuclear
and mitochondrial DNA, coloration, and body size and proportions, concluded that
although whiptails from the gypsum sands had diverged more from their dark soil
counterparts in terms of body size and shape than sympatric earless and fence lizards (see
notes on Holbrookia maculata ruthveni and Sceloporus cowlesi), the genetic data
indicate that the whiptails are failing to speciate. This conclusion suggests that it is more
appropriate to recognize the taxon not as a species (as proposed by Collins, 1997, SSAR
Herpetol. Circ. 25) but as a subspecies of A. inornata (as originally proposed by Wright
and Lowe, 1993, J. Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci. 27: 129157).
35
Walker et al. (1996, J. Herpetol. 30: 271275) called into question some of the characters
used by Wright and Lowe (1993, J. Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci. 27: 129157) to separate
Aspidoscelis inornata junipera from A. i. heptagramma but did not explicitly treat the
names as synonyms.
Walker et al. (1996, J. Herpetol. 30: 271275) called into question some of the characters
used by Wright and Lowe (1993, J. Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci. 27: 129157) to separate
Aspidoscelis inornata llanuras from A. i. heptagramma but did not explicitly treat the
names as synonyms.
A. laredoensis (McKinney, Kay and Anderson, 1973)Laredo Striped
Whiptail (unisexual)
Dessauer and Cole (1991, Copeia 1991: 622637; see also Dessauer et al., 2000, Bull.
Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 246: 1148) presented evidence of both differentiation and
interbreeding between A. marmorata and A. tigris along a transect near the southern part
of the border between Arizona and New Mexico, including a narrow (3 km) hybrid zone
in which hybrid indices based on color patterns and allele frequencies changed abruptly
in concordant step clines. Although those authors interpreted their data as reflecting
incomplete speciation between the two forms (i.e., a single species), the same data
can be interpreted alternatively as reflecting largely separate gene pools (i.e., two
species). Following the terminology of de Queiroz (1998, in D. J. Howard and S. H.
Berlocher [eds.], Endless Forms: Species and Speciation, Oxford University Press, Pp.
5775), they are here considered incompletely separated species.
A. neomexicana (Lowe and Zweifel, 1952)New Mexico Whiptail
(unisexual)
Manning et al. (2005, Am. Mus. Novit. 3492: 156) presented evidence for hybridization
between A. neomexicana and A. sexlineatus viridis, but there is no indication either that
this hybridization has produced a new hybrid species or that it is leading to the fusion of
the two hybridizing species.
A. neotesselata (Walker, Cordes and Taylor, 1997)Colorado Checkered
Whiptail (unisexual)
A. pai (Wright and Lowe, 1993)Pai Striped Whiptail
See note on A. inornata concerning recognition of A. pai as a separate species.
A. scalaris (Cope, 1892)Plateau Spotted Whiptail
36
A. sexlineata (Linnaeus, 1766)Six-lined Racerunner
A. sonorae (Lowe and Wright, 1964)Sonoran Spotted Whiptail
(unisexual)
A. stictogramma (Burger, 1950)Giant Spotted Whiptail
Based on differences in body size, scutellation, and color patterns, Walker and Cordes
(2011, Herp. Review 42: 3339) inferred that A. stictogramma (formerly A. burti
stictogramma) is a separate species from A. burti.
A. tesselata (Say, in James, 1823)Common Checkered Whiptail
(unisexual)
A. tigris (Baird and Girard, 1852)Tiger Whiptail
A. t. munda (Camp, 1916)California Whiptail
A. t. punctilinealis (Dickerson,1919)Sonoran Tiger Whiptail
Maslin and Secoy (1986, Contrib. Zool. Univ. Colorado Mus. 1: 160) treated the name
Aspidoscelis (sackii) innotata as a synonym of A. velox, but Wright (1993, in J. W.
Wright and L. J. Vitt [eds.], Biology of Whiptail Lizards [Genus Cnemidophorus],
Oklahoma Mus. Nat. Hist., Pp. 2781) applied the name A. velox to populations of
triploid parthenogens and treated A. innotata as the name of a separate diploid species.
Cuellar (1977, Evolution 31: 2431) found histoincompatibility (rejection of skin grafts)
between A. velox-like lizards from Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah, which Cuellar and
Wright (1992, C. R. Soc. Biogeogr. 68: 157160) interpreted as potential evidence for
37
different ploidy levels. The type locality of A. velox is in Arizona, while that of A.
innotata is in Utah, and lizards from New Mexico are known to be triploid (Neaves,
1969, J. Exper. Zool. 171: 175184; Dessauer and Cole, 1989, in R. M. Dawley and J.
P. Bogart [eds.], Evolution and Ecology of Unisexual Vertebrates, New York State
Museum, Pp. 4971). If lizards from the type locality of A. innotata turn out to be
diploid, it would be reasonable to recognize a separate diploid species and apply the name
A. innotata (Plateau Unspotted Whiptail) to it.
Taxonomy for Callisaurus follows de Queiroz (1989, Ph.D. dissertation, Univ. California,
Berkeley).
Two recent molecular phylogeographic studies shed some preliminary light on the
relationships and status of the three U.S. subspecies of C. draconoides. Based on
mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), Lindell et al. (2005, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 36: 682694)
found that both C. d. myurus and C. d. ventralis are nested within C. d. rhodostictus,
C. d. ventralis deeply so; however, both C. d. myurus and C. d. ventralis were represented
by small samples, and there were large geographic gaps between these samples and those
representing C. d. rhodostictus. Blaine (2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.)
found that samples from the Mojave Desert and the Great Basin formed a mtDNA
haplotype clade, as did those from the U.S. Sonoran Desert, but he had few samples from
Baja California and none from the Mexican mainland. The status of the subspecies of C.
draconoides deserves further study.
C. brevis Stejneger, 1893Texas Banded Gecko
C. reticulatus Davis and Dixon, 1958Reticulate Banded Gecko
C. switaki (Murphy, 1974)Switaks Banded Gecko
C. s. switaki (Murphy, 1974)Peninsula Banded Gecko
C. variegatus (Baird, 1859 1858)Western Banded Gecko
Grismer (2002, Amphibians and Reptiles of Baja California, Univ. California Press)
treated previously recognized subspecies of C. variegatus in Baja California as pattern
classes; however, that decision seems to have been based at least partly on a philosophical
opposition to the recognition of subspecies as well as on qualitative assessments of
intergratation and did not address the status of taxa not occurring in Baja California. We
have retained the subspecies pending a more explicit and comprehensive study.
38
Blaine (2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.) found that most C. texanus sampled
within the United States formed three non-overlapping mtDNA haplotype clades,
the relationships among which were poorly supported. If the central clade is more closely
related to the western clade, then the two primary clades would correspond roughly with
the two subspecies of C. texanus that occur in the United States. Samples from the
vicinity of Eagle Pass, Maverick County, Texas, formed a separate, earlier diverging
clade that could represent a separate species or subspecies.
Taxonomy for Crotaphytus follows McGuire (1996, Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 32:
1143); for precedence of C. vestigium over C. fasciolatus see McGuire (2000, Bull.
Zool. Nomencl. 57: 158161) and ICZN (2002, Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 59: 228229).
McGuire et al. (2007, Evolution 61: 28792897) interpreted incongruencies between their
mtDNA phylogeny and currently recognized species boundaries in Crotaphytus as
evidence for introgression of C. collaris haplotypes into both C. reticulatus and C.
bicinctores resulting from past hybridization during glacial maxima.
Taxonomy for Dipsosaurus follows de Queiroz (1995, Publ. Espec. Mus. Zool. Univ.
Nac. Autn. Mxico 9: 148).
D. dorsalis (Baird and Girard, 1852)Desert Iguana
D. d. dorsalis (Baird and Girard, 1852)Northern Desert Iguana
Elgaria Gray, 1838Western Alligator Lizards
Taxonomy for Elgaria follows Good (1988, Univ. California Pub. Zool. 121: 1139).
E. coerulea (Wiegmann, 1828)Northern Alligator Lizard
E. c. coerulea (Wiegmann, 1828)San Francisco Alligator Lizard
E. c. palmeri (Stejneger, 1893)Sierra Alligator Lizard
E. c. principis Baird and Girard, 1852Northwestern Alligator Lizard
E. c. shastensis (Fitch, 1934)Shasta Alligator Lizard
E. kingii Gray, 1838Madrean Alligator Lizard
E. k. nobilis Baird and Girard, 1852Arizona Alligator Lizard
E. multicarinata (Blainville, 1835)Southern Alligator Lizard
A molecular phylogeographic study of Feldman and Spicer (2006, Mol. Ecol. 15:
22012222) failed to support currently recognized subspecies boundaries within E.
multicarinata (Fitch, 1938, Am. Midl. Nat. 20: 381424). Haplotypes from the central
39
The results of Feldman and Spicer (2006, Mol. Ecol. 15: 22012222) indicate that E.
panamintina is derived from within E. multicarinata.
Taxonomy for Gambelia follows McGuire (1996, Bull. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 32:
1143) with modifications by Frost and Collins (1988, Herpetol. Rev. 19: 7374; spelling
of the specific epithet of G. sila).
McGuire et al. (2007 Evolution 61: 28792897) found the mtDNA of G. copeii to be
deeply nested within that of G. wislizenii and suggested that perhaps the former should
not be recognized as a separate species. A study of gene flow (or the absence thereof)
between the two forms would clarify the situation.
Taxonomy for Heloderma follows Bogert and Martn del Campo (1956, Bull. Am. Mus.
Nat. Hist. 109: 1238).
Douglas et al. (2010, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 55: 153167) stated that they found no
mtDNA evidence for the two recognized subspecies of H. suspectum; however, their
results are difficult to evaluate because little information is provided on the collection
localities of the sampled specimens. Further study is needed.
Taxonomy for Holbrookia follows Smith (1946, Handbook of Lizards, Cornell Univ.
Press) with modifications by Duellman (1955, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan
569: 114; synonymy of H. m. pulchra with H. m. thermophila), Axtell (1956, Bull.
40
Chicago Acad. Sci 10: 163179; description of H. maculata perspicua and treatment of
H. lacerata as a species), Clarke (1965, Emporia St. Res. Stud. 13: 166; removal of
H. texana to Cophosaurus), Lowe (1964, in C. H. Lowe [ed.], The Vertebrates of
Arizona, Univ. Arizona Press, Pp. 153174; recognition of H. elegans as a species;
for supporting evidence see Adest, 1978, Ph.D. dissertation, Univ. California, Los
Angeles, Wilgenbusch and de Queiroz, 2000, Syst. Biol. 49: 592612, and Axtell, 1998,
Interpretive Atlas of Texas Lizards 18: 119), and those described in additional notes
below.
H. elegans Bocourt, 1874 in Dumril, Mocquard & Bocourt, 1870-1909
Elegant Earless Lizard
Blaine (2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.) found large levels of mtDNA
sequence divergence between samples of this putative species from Arizona and southern
Sonora (H. e. thermophila) versus those from southern Sinaloa (H. e. elegans), though
large sampling gaps make it difficult to determine whether these forms represent
separate species. His data also support the synonymy of H. m. pulchra with H. e.
thermophila).
Blaine (2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.) found that Holbrookia maculata
from the United States formed three non-overlapping mtDNA haplotype clades inhabiting
the Great Plains, the northern Chihuahuan Desert, and the southern Colorado Plateau.
Because his results contradict the taxonomy previously adopted in this list, we have
applied the oldest available names to the three haplotype clades and treated them as
subspecies.
This subspecies was not sampled by Blaine (2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.)
and is thus presently retained until future studies can address its status.
Although mtDNA haplotypes of H. m ruthveni are nested within those of the taxon that
is here called H. m. flavilenta (Blaine, 2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.),
Rosenblum and Harmon (2010, Evolution 65: 946960) found that earless lizards from
the White Sands had diverged both morphologically and genetically from their
counterparts on adjacent darker soils and concluded that the populations are well on
their way toward completing speciation. On the other hand, data from ecotonal
individuals suggest that the populations continue to exchange genes (i.e., that speciation
is incomplete), and therefore it seems appropriate to treat the bleached form as a
subspecies in the sense of a partially separated lineage.
H. propinqua Baird and Girard 1852Keeled Earless Lizard
H. p. propinqua Baird and Girard 1852Northern Keeled Earless
Lizard
Blaine (2008, Ph.D. dissertation, Washington Univ.) found that mtDNA from H. p.
propinqua forms two non-overlapping haplotype clades, one from the red sands south of
41
the Balcones Escarpment and another from the white sands near the southeastern part of
the Balcones Escarpment south into the Gulf Coastal Plain.
Taxonomy for Ophisaurus follows McConkey (1954, Bull. Florida St. Mus. Biol. Sci.
2: 1323) with modifications by Palmer (1987, Herpetologica, 43: 415423; description
of O. mimicus). Macey et al. (1999, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 12: 250272) presented
mtDNA evidence that Ophisaurus, if it includes North American, European, African, and
Asian species, is not monophyletic. Although they favored placing all species in
Anguis, this action is both nomenclaturally disruptive and makes Anguis redundant with
Anguinae; we have therefore adopted their alternative proposal of retaining Ophisaurus
for the North American and Southeast Asian species.
O. attenuatus Cope, 1880Slender Glass Lizard
O. a. attenuatus Cope, 1880Western Slender Glass Lizard
O. a. longicaudus McConkey, 1952Eastern Slender Glass Lizard
O. compressus Cope, 1900Island Glass Lizard
O. mimicus Palmer, 1987Mimic Glass Lizard
O. ventralis (Linnaeus, 1766)Eastern Glass Lizard
Neoseps: See Plestiodon.
Petrosaurus Boulenger, 1885BANDED Rock Lizards
Taxonomy for Petrosaurus follows Jennings (1990, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 494; 1990,
Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 495), with modifications by Grismer (1999, Herpetologica 55:
446469; treatment of P. mearnsi and P. slevini as separate species).
P. mearnsi (Stejneger, 1894)Mearns Rock Lizard
P. m. mearnsi (Stejneger, 1894)Mearns Rock Lizard
Phrynosoma Wiegmann, 1828Horned Lizards
Taxonomy for Phrynosoma follows Reeve (1952, Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull. 34: 817960)
with modifications by Zamudio et al. (1997, Syst. Biol. 46: 284305; treatment of P.
hernandesi as a separate species from P. douglasii and implied treatment of P. d.
brevirostre, P. d. ornatissum, and P. d. ornatum as synonyms of P. hernandesi),
Montanucci (2004, Herpetologica 60: 117139; treatment of P. blainvillii as a separate
species from P. coronatum; see also Leach et al., 2009, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106:
1241812423), Mulcahy et al. (2006, Mol. Ecol. 15: 18071826; treatment of P. goodei
as a separate species from P. platytrhinos), and those described in additional notes below.
Leach and McGuire (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39: 628644) named four subclades
of Phrynosoma based on the results of phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial and
nuclear genes. We have included names of subclades parenthetically, where applicable.
P. (Anota) blainvillii Gray, 1839Blainvilles Horned Lizard
P. cornutum (Harlan, 1825)Texas Horned Lizard
P. (Tapaja) douglasii (Bell, 1829)Pygmy Short-horned Lizard
P. (Doliosaurus) goodei Stejnejer, 1893Goodes Horned Lizard
P. (Tapaja) hernandesi Girard, 1858Greater Short-horned Lizard
P. (T.) h. hernandesi Girard, 1858Hernandezs Short-horned Lizard
Zamudio et al. (1997, Syst. Biol. 46: 284305) did not explicitly propose to eliminate the
previously recognized subspecies taxa within P. hernandesi, though they presented
42
previously circumscribed, are artificial assemblages of populations. They also did not
sample the Mexican taxon formerly known as P. d. brachycercum, which they noted
shares morphological characters with P. hernandesi. The possibilities remain that
brachycercum constitutes 1) a lineage that is related to but fully separated from
P. hernandesi, 2) a partially separated lineage within P. hernandesi, or 3) an unseparated
(artificial) part of the hernandesi lineage. Until the status of this taxon is addressed
explicitly, we have treated it as a valid subspecies taxon and therefore have treated the
remaining populations of P. hernandesi, including all those occurring in the United
States, as the subspecies P. h. hernandesi.
According to Pianka (1991, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 517), the putative diagnostic
characters for the subspecies of Phrynosoma platyrhinos are not reliable, which calls
the taxa themselves into question. Phylogenetic analysis of mtDNA sequences by
Mulcahy et al. (2006, Mol. Ecol. 15: 18071826) raised the possibility of an additional
species or subspecies from the Yuma Proving Ground.
Taxonomy for Phyllodactylus follows Dixon (1969, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 79; 1973, Cat.
Am. Amph. Rept. 141) with modifications by Murphy (1983, Occ. Pap. California Acad.
Sci. 137: 148; treatment of P. nocticolus as a species separate from P. xanti; see also
Blair et al., 2009, Zootaxa 2027: 2842).
Taxonomy for Plestiodon (often as Eumeces) follows Taylor (1935, Univ. Kansas Sci.
Bull. 23: 1643) with modifications by Rodgers (1944, Copeia 1944: 101104; descrip
tion of P. gilberti placerensis), Smith (1946, Univ. Kansas Pub. Mus. Nat. Hist. 1: 8589;
resurrection of P. anthracinus pluvialis), Rodgers and Fitch (1947, Univ. California
Pub. Zool. 48: 169220; description of P. gilberti cancellosus and treatment of P.
skiltonianus brevipes as a synonym of P. gilberti gilberti), Smith and Slater (1949, Trans.
Kansas Acad. Sci. 52: 438448; description of P. septentrionalis pallidus), McConkey
(1957, Bull. Florida St. Mus. (Biol. Sci.) 2: 1323; description of P. egregius similis),
Lowe and Shannon (1954, Herpetologica 10: 185187; description of P. gilberti
arizonensis), Lowe (1955b, Herpetologica 11: 233235; treatment of P. gaigeae as a
subspecies of P. multivirgatus), Mecham (1957, Copeia 1957: 111123; treatment of P.
taylori as a synonym of P. m. gaigeae), Tanner (1958, Great Basin Nat. 17: 5994;
descriptions of P. skiltonianus utahensis and P. s. interparietalis), Axtell (1961, Texas J.
Sci. 13: 345351; see also Axtell and Smith, 2004, Southwest. Nat. 49: 100; priority of P.
multivirgatus epipleurotus over P. m. gaigeae), Mount (1965, The Reptiles and
Amphibians of Alabama, Auburn Univ. Agric. Exper. Station; descriptions of P. egregius
lividus and P. e. insularis), Lieb (1985, Contrib. Sci. Nat. Hist. Mus. Los Angeles Co.
357: 119; treatment of P. brevilineatus and P. tetragrammus as subspecies of a single
species), Tanner (1987, Great Basin Nat. 47: 383421; treatment of P. callicephalus as a
43
separate species from P. tetragrammus), Brandley et al. 2005 (Syst. Biol. 54: 373390;
restriction of Eumeces and resurrection of Plestiodon for a clade containing all of the
North American species and inclusion of the taxon formerly known as Neoseps reynoldsi),
and those described in additional notes below. With the restriction of Eumeces to
the former E. schneideri group (Brandley et al., op. cit.), the standard English name Great
Skinks is appropriate for the members of that clade.
P. anthracinus (Baird, 1850)Coal Skink
P. a. anthracinus Baird,1850Northern Coal Skink
P. a. pluvialis (Cope, 1880)Southern Coal Skink
P. callicephalus (Bocourt, 1879 in Dumril, Mocquard & Bocourt,
1870-1909)Mountain Skink
P. egregius Baird, 1859 1858Mole Skink
Branch et al. (2003, Conserv. Gen. 4: 199212) found that the mainland subspecies P.
e. lividus, P. e. onocrepsis, and P. e. similis exhibit phylogenetic intermixing of mtDNA
haplotypes, suggesting that continued recognition of these taxa may not be warranted.
Howes et al. (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 40: 183194) and Richmond (2006, Evol.
Dev. 8: 477490) presented mitochondrial and nuclear DNA evidence of substantial
phylogeographic structure within P. fasciatus. Although neither set of authors drew any
taxonomic conclusions from their results, those results suggest the possibility of one or
more cryptic species; in particular, samples from the eastern Carolinas are highly
divergent in both mtDNA and microsatellites from nearby populations.
Richmond and Reeder (2002, Evolution 56: 14981513) presented mitochondrial DNA
evidence that populations previously referred to Plestiodon gilberti represent three
lineages that separately evolved large body size and the loss of stripes in late ontogenetic
stages. Although they considered those three lineages to merit species recognition,
they did not propose specific taxonomic changes, and subsequently Richmond and
Jockusch (2007, Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond. B 274: 17011708) and Richmond et al. (2011,
Am. Nat. 178: 320332) have treated them as a single species based on extensive
introgressive hybridization between two of the forms and the lack of prezygotic
isolation between members of all pairs of them. The results of Richmond and Reeder
(op. cit.) contradict the recognition of P. g. arizonensis, which is not differentiated from
P. g. rubricaudatus and therefore has been eliminated from this list, and indicate the
existence of an unnamed and at least partially separate lineage within P. g.
rubricaudatus (their Inyo clade).
P. g. cancellosus (Rodgers and Fitch, 1947)Variegated Skink
Richmond (2006, Evol. Dev. 8: 477490) found a substantial division between mtDNA
haplotypes of eastern and western P. laticeps but did not draw any taxonomic conclusion
from it.
44
P. multivirgatus Hallowell, 1857Many-lined Skink
P. m. epipleurotus (Cope, 1880)Variable Skink
Branch et al. (2003, Conserv. Gen. 4: 199212) found strong phylogeographic structuring
in P. reynoldsi, with separate mtDNA clades occupying the Mt. Dora Ridge and the
northern, central, and southern portions of the Lake Wales Ridge, but they did not
propose to recognize those units taxonomically.
Lieb (1985, Contrib. Sci. Nat. Hist. Mus. Los Angeles Co. 357: 119) treated Plestiodon
callicephalus as a subspecies of P. tetragrammus (see note on P. callicephalus).
Taxonomy for Rhineura follows Gans (1967, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 42; 1967, Cat. Am.
Amph. Rept. 43).
Mulvaney et al. (2005, J. Herpetol. 39: 118124) found mtDNA evidence of substantial
divergence between northern and southern populations of Rhineura floridana and
45
indicated that these groups of populations may be candidates for recognition as separate
species.
Taxonomy for Sauromalus follows Hollingsworth (1998, Herpetol. Monog. 12: 38191)
and the ICZN (2004, Bull. Zool. Nomencl. 61: 7475; precedence of the name S. ater
over S. obesus).
Taxonomy for Sceloporus follows Schmidt (1953, A Check List of North American
Amphibians and Reptiles, Univ. Chicago Press, Chicago) with modifications by
Bell (1954, Herpetologica 10: 3136; resurrection of S. occidentalis bocourtii and S.
o. longipes), Shannon and Urbano (1954, Herpetologica 10: 189191; description of S.
clarki vallaris), Phelan and Brattstrom (1955, Herpetologica 11: 114; description of S.
magister uniformis, S. m. bimaculosus, and S. m. transversus), Tanner (1955, Great Basin
Nat. 15: 3234; description of S. magister cephaloflavus), Lowe and Norris (1956,
Herpetologica 12: 125127; description of S. undulatus cowlesi), Maslin (1956,
Herpetologica 12: 291294; description of S. undulatus erythrocheilus), Smith and
Chrapliwy (1958, Herpetologica 13: 267271; description of subspecies of S. poinsettii),
Cole (1963, Copeia 1963: 413425; treatment of S. virgatus as a species separate
from S. undulatus), Degenhardt and Jones (1972, Herpetologica 28: 212217; description
of S. graciosus arenicolous), Olson (1973, Herpetologica 29: 116127; description of S.
merriami longipunctatus), Sites and Dixon (1981, J. Herpetol. 15: 5969; treatment
of disparilis as a synonym of microlepidotus), Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 4243;
treatment of S. arenicolus as a species separate from S. graciosus), Smith et al. (1992,
Bull. Maryland Herpetol. Soc. 28: 123149; description of S. undulatus tedbrowni
and correction of the spelling of the name S. arenicolus), Smith et al. (1996, Bull.
Maryland Herpetol. Soc. 32: 7074; treatment of S. slevini as a species separate from S.
scalaris), Wiens et al. (1999, Evolution 53: 18841897; restriction of the name S.
jarrovii to one of five inferred species formerly referred to by that name), Leach and
Reeder (2002, Syst. Biol. 51: 4468; treatment of S. consobrinus, S. cowelsi, and
S. tristichus as separate species from S. undulatus), Schulte et al. (2006, Mol. Phylogenet.
Evol. 39: 873880; treatment of S. bimaculosus and S. uniformis as species separate
from S. magister; see Leach and Mulcahy, 2007, Mol. Ecol. 16: 52165233 for
clarification of the distributional limits of those species), and those described in
additional notes below.
Chan et al. (2009, Conserv. Genet. 10: 131142) found mitochondrial DNA and
microsatellite evidence of differentiation of S. arenicolus populations into three genetic
clusters that appear to be recently separated and still experiencing gene flow.
S. bimaculosus Phelan and Brattstrom, 1955Twin-spotted Spiny Lizard
S. clarkii Baird and Girard, 1852Clarks Spiny Lizard
S. c. clarkii Baird and Girard, 1852Sonoran Spiny Lizard
46
Leach and Reeder (2002, Syst. Biol. 51: 4468) noted that the name S. thayerii Baird
and Girard 1852 (type locality: Indianola, Calhoun Co., TX) may turn out to be the
correct name of this species and that populations east of the Mississippi River a
long the Gulf Coast may represent a separate species.
Leach and Reeder (2002, Syst. Biol. 51: 4468) applied the name S. cowlesi to the
populations from roughly the region of the Chihuahuan Desert. Although the name S.
cowlesi was originally applied to light colored lizards from the White Sands of New
Mexico, Leach and Reeder (op. cit.) presented evidence that mtDNA haplotypes
from White Sands lizards are deeply nested within a clade of haplotypes from
geographically proximate darker lizards, and Rosenblum (2006, Am. Nat. 167: 115)
found both phylogenetic mixing of haplotypes between light and dark forms and evidence
of gene flow between them. Rosenblum and Harmon (2010, Evolution 65: 946960)
found that fence lizards from the White Sands exhibited discordant patterns of
morphological and genetic dfferentiation from their counterparts on adjacent darker
soils and concluded that the populations have made incomplete progress toward
speciation. Leach and Cole (2007, Mol. Ecol. 16: 10351054) presented evidence for
hybridization between S. cowlesi and S. tristichus.
Olson (1987, Bull. Maryland Herpetol. Soc. 23: 158167) treated Sceloporus cyanogenys
as a subspecies of S. serrifer based on apparent integrades between the former species
and S. serrifer plioporus. Martnez-Mndez and Mndez de la Cruz (2007, Zootaxa
1609: 5368) inferred S. serrifer plioporus and S. cyanogenys to form a mtDNA clade;
however, that clade was relatively distantly related to S. serrifer serrifer and S.
serrifer prezygus haplotypes (see also Wiens et al., 2010, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol.
54: 150161). Therefore, they synonymized the name S. s. plioporus with S. cyanogenys,
retaining S. serrifer for a species that occurs south and east of the Isthmus of
Tehuantepec.
S. graciosus Baird and Girard, 1852Common Sagebrush Lizard
S. g. gracilis Baird and Girard, 1852Western Sagebrush Lizard
S. g. graciosus Baird and Girard, 1852Northern Sagebrush Lizard
S. g. vandenburgianus Cope, 1896Southern Sagebrush Lizard
Censky (1986, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 386) treated Sceloporus graciosus vandenburgianus
as a subspecies of S. graciosus, but Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 4243) proposed
recognizing this taxon as a species, S. vandenburgianus. Wiens and Reeder (1997,
Herpetol. Monog. 11: 1101) followed Collinss proposal but noted the morphological
similarity and geographic proximity of this taxon to populations of S. graciosus gracilis.
We have retained the traditional taxonomy pending a detailed phylogeographic study.
Leach and Mulcahy (2007, Mol. Ecol. 16: 52165233) found evidence of asymmetrical
47
gene flow between S. magister and both S. bimaculosus and S. uniformis, with S.
magister acting as a genetic sink. Because these lineages show evidence of both
separation (with divergence) and ongoing asymmetrical gene flow, they can be considered
partially separated species. Leach and Mulcahy (op. cit.) also identified a fourth
potentially separate lineage in northeastern Baja California (currently unnamed). Schulte
et al. (2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39: 873880) recognized the subspecies S. m.
magister and S. m. cephaloflavus because their single sample from the Colorado Plateau
(assumed to represent the subspecies S. m. cephaloflavus) was inferred to be the sister
group of the samples representing S. m. magister. Leach and Mulcahy (op. cit.),
however, found that specimens from closer to the type locality of S. m. cephaloflavus
were part of S. uniformis rather than S. magister; consequently, we have not recognized
subspecies within S. magister.
Leach et al. (2010, Biol. Jo. Linn. Soc. 100: 630641) presented mtDNA evidence that
the previously recognized subspecies S. o. taylori is polyphyletic and represents
convergent phenotypic evolution among high elevation populations of S. o. biseriatus.
Wiens and Reeder (1997, Herpetol. Monog. 11: 1101) suggested that Sceloporus
occidentalis becki should probably be recognized as a species on the basis of
diagnosability and allopatry relative to other S. occidentalis.
S. tristichus Cope in Yarrow 1875Plateau Fence Lizard
Leach and Cole (2007, Mol. Ecol. 16: 10351054) presented evidence for hybridization
between S. tristichus and S. cowlesi.
S. undulatus (Bosc and Daudin in Sonnini and Latreille, 1801)Eastern Fence
Lizard
S. uniformis Phelan and Brattstrom, 1955Yellow-backed Spiny Lizard
S. variabilis Wiegmann, 1834Rose-bellied Lizard
S. v. marmoratus Hallowell, 1852Texas Rose-bellied Lizard
48
Tennessen and Zamudio (2008, Copeia 2008: 558564) presented evidence of high
genetic divergence and, for the most part, reciprocal monophyly in mtDNA haplotypes,
among populations of S. virgatus from the Chiricahua, Animas, Peloncillo, and San
Luis mountain ranges, suggesting isolation of those populations for hundreds of
thousands to millions of years and the possibility of intrinsic reproductive barriers.
Branch et al. (2003, Conserv. Gen. 4: 199212) found strong phylogeographic structuring
in S. woodi, with mtDNA of lizards from populations occupying different major
scrub archipelagos differring by 2.08.0% and likely qualifying as evolutionarily
significant units.
Taxonomy for Scincella follows Greer (1974, Austral. J. Zool. Suppl. Ser. 31: 167).
Jackson and Austin (2009, Evolution 64: 409428) presented evidence of significant
genetic structure among populations of S. lateralis as well as of gene flow between both
haplotype clades and population clusters inferred from microsatellite data.
Taxonomy for Sphaerodactylus follows Kluge (1995, Am. Mus. Novit. 3139: 123) and
Schwartz and Henderson (1988, Contrib. Biol. Geol. Milwaukee Pub. Mus. 74: 1264).
S. notatus Baird, 1859 1858Reef Gecko
S. n. notatus Baird, 1859 1858Florida Reef Gecko
Uma Baird, 1859 1858Fringe-toed Lizards
Taxonomy for Uma follows Pough (1973, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 126; 1974, Cat. Am.
Amph. Rept. 155; 1977, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 197; see also de Queiroz, 1989, Ph.D.
dissertation, Univ. California, Berkeley), with modifications by Trpanier and Murphy
(2001, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 18: 327334; treatment of U. rufopunctata as a species
separate from U. notata), and those described in additional notes below.
Hedtke et al. (2007, Herpetologica 63: 411420) found low levels of differention among
populations of U. inornata.
Populations formerly assigned to U. rufopunctata from the Mohawk Dunes, Yuma Co.,
AZ appear to represent a currently undescribed cryptic species (Trpanier and Murphy,
2001, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 18: 327334).
Murphy et al. (2006, Jo. Arid Environ. 67: 226247) found that mtDNA haplotypes of
U scoparia formed northern and southern clades, with both nortern and southern
haplotypes present at one locality.
49
Taxonomy for Urosaurus follows (Mittleman, 1942, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 91: 103
181) with modifications by Smith and Taylor (1950, Bull. U. S. Natl. Mus. 199: 1253;
treatment of U. graciosus as a separate species from U. ornatus; see also Lowe, 1955,
Herpetologica 11: 96101), Murray (1953, Herpetologica 9: 110112; treatment of the
name U. ornatus chiricahuae as a synonym of U. o. linearis), Langebartel and Smith
(1954, Herpetologica 10: 125136; treatment of the name U. o. linearis as a synonym of
U. o. schotti), Lowe (1955, Herpetologica 11: 96101; description of U. graciosus
shannoni), Aguirre et al. (1999, Herpetologica 55: 369381, treatment of the name U.
microscutatus as a synonym of U. nigricaudus), and those described in additional notes
below.
Vitt and Dickson (1988, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 448) called into question the diagnostic
characters used to separate these taxa, implying that there is little evidence for the
existence of partially separated lineages.
Lindell et al. (2008, Biol. Jo. Linn. Soc. 94: 89104) found several deep phylogeographic
divergences in the mtDNA of U. nigricaudus that are congruent with Miocence and
Pliocene temporary vicariance events. Those divergences, however, were not reflected
in previously collected allozyme data (Aguirre et al. 1999, Herpetologica 55: 369381),
which Lindell et al. interpreted as evidence of ongoing gene flow and the absence of
speciation. Feldman et al. (2011, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 61: 714725) questioned
the conspecificity of U. nigricaudus and U. microscutatus; however, they did not
present any evidence supporting the alternative hypothesis. Moreover, the closer
relationship of southern U. microscutatus with U. nigricaudus than with northern U.
microscutatus calls into question the previous circumscriptions of those taxa, if not
their status as separate species. For justification of the standard English name Baja
California (rather than Black-tailed) Brush Lizard see the note on this species in de
Queiroz et al. (2003, Herpetol. Rev. 34: 198201; 2008, in Crother [Ed.], Herp. Circ. 37:
2445).
Haenel (2007, Mol. Ecol. 16: 43214334) found substantial phylogeographic structure
in the mtDNA of U. ornatus, some of which is roughly consistent with previously
recognized subspecies (e.g., U. o. wrighti from the Colorado Plateau), though other
aspects are not (e.g., deep splits within U. o. schottii, including some inferred clades
for which there are available names). The phylogeography of U. ornatus deserves further
study, particularly with regard to taxonomic implications.
50
Taxonomy for Uta follows Pack and Tanner (1970, Great Basin Nat. 30: 7190),
McKinney (1971, Copeia 1971: 596613), and Ballinger and Tinkle (1972, Misc. Pub.
Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan 145: 183), with modifications described in the note below.
U. stansburiana Baird and Girard in Stansbury 1852Common Sideblotched Lizard
Upton and Murphy (1997, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 8: 104113) presented mtDNA
evidence for a distant relationship between Uta specimens from Durango versus those
from Baja California and surrounding islands (as well as one locality in western Sonora),
and they considered the Durango population to constitute a different species, to which
they applied the name U. stejnegeri. Corl et al. (2009, Evolution, 64: 7996) presented
a phylogenetic tree based on mtDNA that is roughly congruent with previously
recognized subspecies within the United States and corroborates the relatively distant
relationship of U. s. stejnegeri to specimens from Baja California. Although these two
studies are complementary in terms of geographic sampling, significant sampling gaps
remain (central and eastern Nevada, northern Baja California, and the southeastern part
of the distribution). We have therefore refrained from recognizing U. stejnegeri as a
species pending a more comprehensive phylogeographic study.
Taxonomy for Xantusia follows Savage (1963, Contrib. Sci. Los Angeles Co. Mus. 71:
138) with modifications by Bezy (1967, Copeia 1967: 653661; treatment of X.
arizonae as a subspecies of X. vigilis [but see below]; 1967, J. Arizona Acad. Sci. 4: 163
167; description of X. vigilis sierrae; 1972, Contrib. Sci. Los Angeles Co. Mus. 227:
129; inclusion of Klauberina riversiana in Xantusia), Grismer and Galvan (1983,
Trans. San Diego Soc. Nat. Hist. 21: 155165; description of X. henshawi gracilis),
Papenfuss et al. (2001, Sci. Pap. Nat. Hist. Mus. Univ. Kansas 23: 19; description of
X. bezyi and treatment of X. arizonae as a separate species from X. vigilis; see also
Sinclair et al., 2004, Am. Nat. 164: 396414 and Leavitt et al., 2007, Mol. Ecol. 16:
44554481), Lovich (2001, Herpetologica 57: 470487; treatment of X. gracilis as a
separate species from X. henshawi), Sinclair et al. (2004, Am. Nat. 164: 396414;
treatment of X. sierrae and X. wigginsi as separate species from X. vigilis and treatment
of the name X. v. utahensis as a synonym of X. vigilis; see also Leavitt et al., 2007, Mol.
Ecol. 16: 4455-4481), and those described in additional notes below.
Lovich (2001, Herpetologica 57: 470487) presented mtDNA evidence that the
opulations of Xantusia henshawi represent at least three separately evolving lineages,
though he did not propose recognizing them as species.
51
Sinclair et al. (2004, Am. Nat. 164: 396414) considered the treatment of Xantusia
sierrae as a separate species from X. vigilis as tentative, because of nesting of mtDNA
haplotypes of the former within those of the latter (see also Leavitt et al., 2007, Mol.
Ecol. 16: 4455-4481).
Leavitt et al. (2007, Mol. Ecol. 16: 4455-4481) documented overlap of the X. wigginsi
and X. vigilis haplotype clades in San Diego County, where it remains to be determined
if the two forms are exchanging genes. Those authors also identified two haplotype
clades (designated by them as the San Jacinto and Yucca Valley clades) that may
represent separate species.
52
Squamata Snakes
Brian I. Crother1 (Chair), Jeff Boundy2, Frank T. Burbrink3, Jonathan A.
Campbell4, R. Alexander Pyron5
Department of Biology, Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, LA
70402
2
Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, P.O. Box 98,000, Baton Rouge,
LA 70898-9000 and Museum of Natural Science, Louisiana State University,
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
3
Biology Department, 6S-143, 2800 Victory Drive, College of Staten Island/
CUNY, Staten Island, NY 10314
4
Department of Biology, UTA Box 19498, University of Texas, Arlington, TX
76019
5
Department of Biological Sciences, 2023 G St. NW, The George Washington
University, Washington, D.C. 20052
1
Mitochondrial data suggest that this species may consist of up to three independently
evolving lineages not concordant with traditionally recognized subspecies (Guiher and
Burbrink 2008, Mol. Phylogen. Evol. 48: 112-125).
Mitochondrial data suggest that this species may consist of two independently evolving
lineages not concordant with traditionally recognized subspecies (Guiher and Burbrink,
2008, Mol. Phylogen. Evol. 48: 112-125.)
Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 4243) elevated A. e. occidentalis to specific status
to include all populations in the Sonoran and Mohave Desert regions, the first use of
this binomial. Liner (1994, SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 23: 1113) and Collins (1997, SSAR
Herpetol. Circ. 25: 140) followed this arrangement. Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev.
22: 4243) was the first use of this binomial. Because no discussion of the taxonomic
diagnosis was presented (although Dixon [1959, Southwest. Nat. 4: 2029] found tail
length differences between eastern and western groups), we retain occidentalis as a
nominal subspecies.
53
The spelling of the standard English name has been changed from Mojave to Mohave
for consistency with other names in the list (see note for Crotalus scutulatus).
B. rosaliae (Mocquard, 1899)Baja California Ratsnake
B. subocularis (Brown, 1901)Trans-Pecos Ratsnake
B. s. subocularis (Brown, 1901)Northern Trans-Pecos Ratsnake
Carphophis Gervais, 1843NORTH AMERICAN Wormsnakes
C. amoenus (Say, 1825)Common Wormsnake
C. a. amoenus (Say, 1825)Eastern Wormsnake
C. a. helenae (Kennicott, 1859)Midwestern Wormsnake
C. vermis (Kennicott, 1859)Western Wormsnake
No recent studies have examines the taxonomy of this wide-ranging species using
morphological (last reviewed by Williams and Wilson, 1967, Tulane Studies in Zoology
13: 103124) or molecular data.
C. coccinea (Blumenbach, 1788)Scarletsnake
C. c. coccinea (Blumenbach, 1788)Florida Scarletsnake
C. c. copei Jan, 1863Northern Scarletsnake
C. c. lineri Williams, Brown and Wilson, 1966Texas Scarletsnake
Charina (Gray 1849)Rubber Boas
Kluge (1993, Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 107: 293351) placed Lichanura in the synonymy of
Charina because they formed sister taxa. Burbrink (2005, Mol. Phylogenet. Evo. 34:
167180) corroborated the relationship found by Kluge. However, Rodrguez-Robles et
al. (2001, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 18: 227237) found C. b. umbratica to represent a
54
morphologically distinct, allopatric lineage that they elevated to species status based on
mitochondrial sequences, along with allozyme data from a previous study (Weisman,
1988, MS Thesis, CSU Polytechnic Pomona). With the recognition of C. umbratica and
fossil species referred to both Charina and Lichanura (Holman, 2000, Fossil Snakes
of North America, Indiana Univ. Press), neither genus is monotypic, and they are treated
here as separate genera.
Grismer et al. (2002, Herpetologica 58: 1831) found C. cinctus, C. punctatissimus, and
C. stramineus to represent morphotypes of a single species.
There is some question as to the validity of the name C. saxatilis (Funk, 1967, Southwest
Nat. 12: 180), the Gila Mountains Shovel-nosed Snake, which is generally considered to
be a synonym of C. o. annulata (see Cross, 1978, Ph.D. dissertation, Univ. Arizona).
Mahrdt et al. (2001, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 730) considered C. saxatilis a synonym of
C. o. annulata. Wood et al. (2008, Cons. Gen.) demonstrated, using mtDNA and
morphological data, that population structure was not concordant with the traditional
subspecific taxonomy. They also revealed two potentially, independent evolutionary
lineages.
C. occipitalis (Hallowell, 1854)Western Shovel-nosed Snake
C. o. annulata (Baird, 1859 1858)Colorado Desert Shovel-nosed
Snake
C. o. klauberi (Stickel, 1941)Tucson Shovel-nosed Snake
C. o. occipitalis (Hallowell, 1854)Mohave Shovel-nosed Snake
The spelling of the standard English name has been changed from Mojave to Mohave
for consistency with other names in the list (see note for Crotalus scutulatus).
55
Contrary to Collins (1997, SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 25: 140), Camper and Dixon (1994,
Ann. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 63: 148) did not recognize any subspecies for bilineatus.
Fitch et al. (1981, Trans, Kansas Acad. Sci. 84: 196203) argued for the elevation of C. c.
mormon. This recommendation was rejected by Greene (1983, J. Herpetol. 18: 210211),
and was supported by Corn and Bury (1986, Herpetologica 42: 258264), who showed
a broad zone of intergradation across Colorado and Utah. Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev.
22: 4243) re-elevated mormon to specific status, although allopatry was not suitably
demonstrated. Anderson (1996, MS thesis, Southeastern Louisiana Univ.) argued that
based on allozyme data C. c. mormon cannot be differentiated but that C. c. paludicola
and C. c. oaxaca were diagnosable and should be elevated to species status. We retain
C. c. mormon and await action on oaxaca and paludicola until the data are published.
Burbrink et al (2008, Mol. Phylogen. Evol 47:274-288) have demonstrated using
mtDNA that C. constrictor may be composed of six independently evolving lineages not
concordant with most recognized subspecies. In particular, neither C. c. mormon or C.
paludicola represents an evolutionarily distinct lineage. No samples of C. oaxaca were
included.
Mitochondrial data suggests that this species may consist of multiple, independently
evolving lineages that are not concordant with currently defined subspecies (R. Pyron
and F. Burbrink, pers. comm.). However, we retain the traditionally defined subspecies
pending publication of these data.
56
C. schotti (Baird and Girard, 1853)Schotts Whipsnake
Camper and Dixon (1994, Ann. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 63: 148) elevated C. schotti
from C. taeniatus with ruthveni retained as a subspecies .
This species was originally named Contia longicaudae by Feldman and Hoyer (2010,
Copeia, 2010: 254267); however, because they explicity treated the second part of the
binomen as an adjective, it must agree with the name Contia in gender and number so
that the correct spelling is Contia longicauda.
The traditional view of rattlesnake taxonomy that recognizes the two monophyletic
sister genera Crotalus and Sistrurus (e.g. Brattstrom, 1964, San Diego Soc. Nat. Hist.
13: 185268) has recently been challenged. Stille (1987, Herpetologica 43: 98104) and
McCranie (1989, Herpetologica 44: 123126) presented data that suggested Sistrurus is
not monophyletic and rendered Crotalus paraphyletic. Parkinson (1999, Copeia 1999:
576586) found Sistrurus monophyletic but its position rendered Crotalus paraphyletic.
Knight et al. (1993, Syst. Biol. 42: 356367) used mtDNA to defend the traditional
generic taxonomy, but in order to do so ignored the most parsimonious tree. Murphy et
al. (2002, in Schuett et al. [eds.] Biology of the Vipers, Eagle Mountain Publishing, Pp.
6992) resolved the paraphyly by placing the extralimital taxon S. ravus in Crotalus.
A recent study proposed the division of Crotalus and Sistrurus into nine genera (Hoser,
2009, Australasian J. Herp. 6: 1-21), though later authors found that this journal did not
appear to follow the requirements of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature,
and the revision of Crotalus and other genera were thus likely invalid (Wallach et al.,
2009, Zootaxa 2236: 26-36).
C. adamanteus Palisot de Beauvois, 1799Eastern Diamond-backed
Rattlesnake
C. atrox Baird and Girard, 1853Western Diamond-backed Rattlesnake
C. cerastes Hallowell, 1854Sidewinder
Douglas et al. (2006, Mol. Ecol. 15: 33533374), using mtDNA, found several
geographically distinct lineages within C. cerastes. Only one of these lineages
corresponded to a recognized subspecies. (C. c. laterorepens).
The spelling of the standard English name has been changed from Mojave to Mohave
for consistency with other names in the list (see note for Crotalus scutulatus).
57
Pisani et al. (1972, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci. 75: 255263) conducted a multivariate
analysis of variation in C. horridus and concluded that characters tended to be clinal and
recommended against recognition of the two subspecies. Brown and Ernst (1986,
Brimleyana 12: 5774) countered that morphology in the eastern part of the range
supported recognition of coastal plain and montane subspecies. Clark et al. (2003, J.
Herpetol. 37: 145154) identified three mitochondrial DNA lineages separated by the
Appalachian and Allegheny Mountain ranges that did not correspond with the classic
arrangement of subspecies within C. horridus.
C. lepidus (Kennicott, 1861)Rock Rattlesnake
C. l. klauberi Gloyd, 1936Banded Rock Rattlesnake
C. l. lepidus (Kennicott, 1861)Mottled Rock Rattlesnake
C. mitchellii (Cope, 1861)Speckled Rattlesnake
C. m. pyrrhus (Cope, 1867 1866)Southwestern Speckled
Rattlesnake
C. molossus Baird and Girard, 1853Black-tailed Rattlesnake
C. m. molossus Baird and Girard, 1853Northern Black-tailed
Rattlesnake
C. oreganus Holbrook, 1840Western Rattlesnake
Pook et al. (2000, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 15: 269282), Ashton and de Queiroz (2001,
Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 21: 176189), and Douglas et al. (2002, Biology of the Vipers,
Schuett, Hoggren, Douglas, Greene [eds.] Eagle Mountain Press) analyzed mtDNA
sequence data and concluded that Crotalus viridis comprised at least two clades, C. viridis
and C. oreganus, with C. cerberus being the sister taxon to populations of C. oreganus.
The former two studies did not formally recognize C. cerberus as a species, although
both suggested that it was distinct based on sequence differences and allopatry. The latter
study did recognize C. cerberus as well as four other taxa. Although the studies relied on
the same locus, we conservatively conclude that the congruence among all three studies
might suggest the recognition of C. viridis, C. oreganus and C. cerberus.
The status of the two widely allopatric subspecies (one extralimital) requires reevaluation.
58
in the preface to his Venomous Reptiles of Arizona (1986) argued for Mohave as
did Campbell and Lamar (2004,The Venomous Reptiles of the Western Hemisphere).
According to linguistic experts on Native American languages, either spelling is correct,
but using either the j or h is based on whether the word is used in a Spanish or
English context. Given that this is an English names list, we use the h spelling (P.
Munro, Linguistics, UCLA, pers. comm.).
The English name of the nominal subspecies has been changed to reflect the distribution
rather than describe rattlesnakes from a small portion of its distribution (D. Hardy and H.
Greene, pers. comm.).
See comments under C. oreganus. Douglas et al. (2002, Biology of the Vipers, Schuett,
Hoggren, Douglas, Greene [eds.] Eagle Mountain Press) synonymized C.v. nuntius with
C. v. viridis.
C. willardi Meek, 1906, 1905Ridge-nosed Rattlesnake
C. w. obscurus Harris and Simmons, 1976New Mexico Ridge-nosed
Rattlesnake
C. w. willardi Meek, 1906, 1905Arizona Ridge-nosed Rattlesnake
Diadophis Baird and Girard, 1853Ring-necked Snakes
D. punctatus (Linnaeus, 1766)Ring-necked Snake
Numerous data suggest that more than one lineage exists (Blanchard, 1942, Bull. Chicago
Acad. Sci. 7: 1144; Gelbach, 1974, Herpetologica 30: 140148; Pinou et al., 1995, J.
Herpetol. 29: 105110; Feldman and Spicer, 2006, Mol. Ecol. 15: 22012222). Using
mitochondrial data sampled from specimens across their range, Fontanella et al. (2008,
Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 46: 1049-1070) found at least 14 lineages that do not follow the
geographic range of the subspecies, and may be independently evolving taxa. While D.
punctatus may be divided into several species in the near future, we refrain from making
any changes at present. Evidence to synonymize the various races into a single species
has been poorly presented, and our arrangement follows the traditional subspecies
groupings.
59
Wster et al. (2001, Herpetol. J. 11: 157165) demonstrated that couperi is a distinct
species using morphological evidence.
D. melanurus (Dumril, Bibron, and Dumril, 1854)Central American
Indigo Snake
Wster et al. (2001, Herpetol. J. 11: 157165) showed that the South American D. corais
is distinct from the Central/North American (D. melanurus) taxon.
Cundall and Rossman (1984, Herpetologica 40: 388405) analyzed skull morphology and
showed substantial divergence between F. a. abacura and F. a. reinwardtii.
The previous Standard English names of Ficimia and Gyalopion were misleading relative
to their geographic ranges. All are distributed in Mexico, but Ficimia had the moniker
Mexican, whereas Gyalopion had the name Plateau, yet is clearly not confined to any
plateau. Given that Ficimia has the easternmost distribution, we call it Eastern
and call Gyalopion Western.
G. canum Cope, 1861 1860Chihuahuan Hook-nosed Snake
G. quadrangulare (Gnther, 1893 in Salvin and Godman, 1885-1902)
Thornscrub Hook-nosed Snake
Heterodon Latreille, 1801North American Hog-nosed Snakes
H. gloydi Edgren, 1952Dusty Hog-nosed Snake
Werler and Dixon (2000, Texas Snakes, University of Texas Press, Austin) regarded
H. n. gloydi to be an allopatric, diagnosable taxon restricted to the low plains - eastern
forest ecotone of eastern Texas. Smith et al. (2003, J. Kansas Herpetol. 5: 1720)
countered that it was not diagnosable.
60
H. kennerlyi Kennicott, 1860Mexican Hog-nosed Snake
Smith et al. (2003, J. Kansas Herpetol. 5: 1720), based on two scale characters,
separated H. n. kennerlyi from H. n. nasicus and elevated the former to species.
Because the three subspecies of H. nasicus have been elevated to species, their respective
standard English names remain associated with each. Hence, there is no longer a
Western Hog-nosed Snake.
Taxonomy of Hypsiglena has received some critical review since Tanners revision of the
genus (1944, Great Basin Nat. 5: 2592). Dixon (1965, Southwest. Nat. 10: 125131) and
Dixon and Dean (1986, Southwest. Nat. 31: 307318) studied a morphological contact
zone between northern and southern taxa at the SonoraSinaloa border in Mexico, finding
that it comprised a narrow zone of hybridization with some taxa existing in sympatry.
Hardy and McDiarmid (1969, Univ. Kansas Pub. Mus. Nat. Hist. 18: 39252) examined
specimens across the range of this presumptive contact and elsewhere in western
Mexico and concluded that no morphological characters existed to separate torquata and
ochrorhyncha, except maybe nuchal patterns, which they decided (p. 170) was a case of
pattern dimorphism in a single, otherwise uniform, species. Grismer et al. (1994, Bull.
So. California Acad. Sci. 93: 4580) dismissed the recognition of subspecies in Baja
California, stating, without evidence, that the subspecies intergrade widely. Mulcahy
(2008,Mol. Phylogen. Evol.46: 1095-1115) conducted a comprehensive phylogeographic
study of Hypsiglena based on an mtDNA analysis of >150 individuals. Mulcahy (2008)
recognized six species in what was considered H. torquata, five of which are consistent
with previously described lineages (e.g. subspecies), while one represents a unique
lineage that remains to be described. Mulcahy (2008) also recommended maintaining the
subspecies designations for several of the widespread, polymorphic species, which may
represent incipient species. The nominal species H. torquata is now restricted to Mexico,
three described forms occur in the USA, and the undescribed form is endemic to the
Cochise Filter Barrier area of southeastern Arizona and associated New Mexico.
H. chlorophaea Cope, 1860Desert Nightsnake
H. c. deserticola (Tanner, 1944)Northern Desert Nightsnake
H. c. loreala (Tanner, 1944)Mesa Verde Nightsnake
H. c. chlorophaea Cope, 1860Sonoran Nightsnake
H. jani (Duges, 1866)Chihuahuan Nightsnake
H. j. texana (Stejneger, 1893)Texas Nightsnake
H. ochrorhyncha Cope, 1860Coast Nightsnake
H. o. nuchalata (Tanner, 1943)California Nightsnake
H. o. klauberi Tanner, 1944San Diego Nightsnake
Lampropeltis Fitzinger, 1843Kingsnakes
The composition of this group was recently investigated by Pyron and Burbrink (2009,
Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 52: 524-529) and, with exception to Stilosoma, the traditionally
recognized species within this genus were found to represent a monophyletic group.
Reviews of the status of various species and the recognition of additional taxa are
forthcoming (F. Burbrink et al., pers.comm.).
Garstka (1982, Breviora 466: 135) and more recently Bryson et al. (2007, Mol.
61
Phylogenet. Evol. 43: 674684) reviewed the mexicana species group of Lampropeltis.
Based on the more recent molecular work, it appears that the recognition of the traditional
species of alterna, mexicana and triangulum may be incorrect. Until more data are
available to resolve the taxonomy of these groups, we withhold making any changes.
Given the apparent complexity of the situation and the widespread morphological
variation of L. alterna, we do not recognize any subspecies, though Hilken and Schlepper
(1998, Salamandra 34: 97124) argued for recognition of L. alterna alterna and L. a.
blairi.
Previously considered a subspecies of L. getula, Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol. Ecol.
18: 2443-3457 and 2009, Zootaxa 2241: 22-32), demonstrated that this is a distinct
species.
L. calligaster (Harlan, 1827) Yellow-bellied Kingsnake
L. c. calligaster (Harlan, 1827) Prairie Kingsnake
L. c. occipitolineata Price, 1987South Florida Mole Kingsnake
L. c. rhombomaculata (Holbrook, 1840)Mole Kingsnake
L. elapsoides (Holbrook, 1838)Scarlet Kingsnake
Using multiple nuclear and mitochondrial genes, Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol.
Phylogenet. Evol. 52: 524-529) found that L. elapsoides is distinct from L. triangulum
Dowling and Maxson (1990, J. Zool. London 221: 7785), using immunological distance
data, found Stilosoma to fall within Lampropeltis. Keogh (1996, Herpetologica 52: 406
416), however, found Stilosoma to be part of the probable sister group to Lampropeltis.
Rodriguez-Robles and de Jesus Escobar (1999, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 68: 355385) and
Bryson et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 43: 674684) corroborated Dowling and
Maxson using mtDNA evidence, and demonstrated that recognition of Stilosoma as a
genus does render Lampropeltis paraphyletic. This was confirmed and ameliorated in
Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 52: 524-529).
Formerly considered a subspecies of L. getula, Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol. Ecol. 18:
2443-3457 and 2009, Zootaxa 2241: 22-32), demonstrated that this is a distinct species.
However, compared to the range of the former subspecies, this taxon occurs only west of
the Mississippi River.
Formerly considered a subspecies of L. pyromelana, Burbrink et al. (2011, Mol.
Phylogenet. Evol. 60: 445-454) demonstrated the existence of two species using
coalescent species delimitation methods and ecological niche modeling. The complex
comprises a northern species on the Colorado Plateau (L. pyromelana) and a southern
species (P. knoblochi) found primarily on the Sierra Madre Occidental and associated
Madrean Sky Islands.
Formerly considered a subspecies of L. getula, Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol. Ecol. 18:
2443-3457 and 2009, Zootaxa 2241:22-32), demonstrated that this is a distinct species.
Burbrink et al. (2011, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 60: 445-454) demonstrated that this species
is distinct from L. knoblochi.
62
L. splendida (Baird and Girard, 1853)Desert Kingsnake
Formerly considered a subspecies of L. getula, Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol. Ecol. 18:
2443-3457 and 2009, Zootaxa 2241:22-32), demonstrated that this is a distinct species.
Given molecular evidence from Bryson et al. (2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 43: 674
684), L. triangulum cannot represent a single species if L. mexicana and L. alterna are
recognized. Nuclear and mitochondrial evidence suggest that L. triangulum comprises
multiple, deeply divergent lineages (S. Ruane et al., pers. comm.), though we refrain from
making any changes pending publication of those data.
Rodrguez-Robles et al. (1999, Mol. Ecol. 8: 19231934) examined mtDNA and color
pattern. The DNA suggested distinct northern and southern clades that they left unnamed,
but which may represent independently evolving taxa. The color pattern was too variable
to differentiate the seven subspecies. We follow these recommendations and do not
recognize any subspecies at this time.
Campbell (1998, The Amphibians and Reptiles of Northern Guatemala, Yucatn, and
Belize, Univ. Oklahoma Press) elevated L. s. polysticta to species, which leaves L.
septentrionalis monotypic.
See annotation under Charina. Wood et al. (2008, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 46: 484582),
used mtDNA and found three main clades within trivirgata that do not correspond to
currently recognized subspecies. They concluded that these clades corresponded to two
species, L. trivirgata and L. orcutti.
L. orcutti (Stejneger 1889)Northern Three-lined Boa
L. trivirgata (Cope, 1861)Rosy Boa
Masticophis: See Coluber.
63
Although Castoe et al. and J. Boundy (2006, Joint Meeting Ichthyologists Herpetologists
abstracts) presented molecular and morphological evidence, respectively, that M. fulvius
and M. tener are distinct species, these data have not been published. However, this
species has been diagnosed by Campbell and Lamar (2004, in J. A. Campbell and W. W.
Lamar [eds.], Venomous Reptiles of the Western Hemisphere, Comstock, Publ. Assoc.,
Ithaca, Pp. 195197).
Lawson et al. (1991, Copeia 1991: 638659) presented allozyme data that supported the
separation of clarkii and fasciata.
N. cyclopion (Dumril, Bibron and Dumril, 1854)Mississippi Green
Watersnake
N. erythrogaster (Forster, 1771)Plain-bellied Watersnake
Allozyme data indicate that N. fasciata forms two clades, differentiated on the midFlorida Panhandle (Lawson et al., 1991, Copeia 1991: 638659). Also see note under N.
sipedon.
N. harteri (Trapido, 1941)Brazos River Watersnake
N. paucimaculata (Tinkle and Conant, 1961)Concho Watersnake
64
Suggested to be separated from harteri by Rose and Selcer (1989, J. Herpetol. 23:
261266) and supported by molecular data in Densmore et al. (1992, Herpetologica 48:
6068).
Brandley et al. (2010. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 57:552-560) found evidence for multiple
lineages of N. rhombifer. Two lineages were found roughly east and west of the
Mississippi River, with a third in Mexico, corresponding to N. r. werleri.
Numerous examples exist of hybridization between sipedon and fasciata (Conant, 1963,
Am. Mus. Novit. 2122: 138; Blaney and Blaney, 1979, Herpetologica 35: 350359;
Schwaner et al., 1980, Isozyme Bull. 12: 102; Schwaner and Mount, 1976, Occas. Pap.
Mus. Nat. Hist. Univ. Kansas 45: 144), although sipedon and fasciata are apparently not
sister taxa (Lawson, 1987, J. Herpetol. 21: 140157).
Recognition of the Florida peninsular form described by Grobman (1984, Bull. Florida
St. Mus. Biol. Sci. 29: 153170) is supported by Plummer (1987, Copeia 1987: 483485).
Reviewed by Walley and Plummer (2000, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 718).
Given that Liochlorophis (Oldham and Smith, 1991, Bull. Maryland Herpetol. Soc. 27:
201215) is the monotypic sister genus to the monotypic genus Opheodrys, recognition
of the former taxon is unnecessary, and reduces the amount of information conveyed by
the names. As such, we retain vernalis in Opheodrys. The several subspecies described
by Grobman (1941, Misc. Pub. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan 50: 138; 1992, J. Herpetol.
26: 176186) are based on character clines and have received little recognition.
Utiger et al. (2002, Russian J. Herpetol. 9: 105124), using molecular data, divided
Elaphe into eight genera. New World Elaphe are part of a clade distinct from Old World
species, for which Pantherophis Fitzinger, 1843, was resurrected as the oldest available
name. Using multiple nuclear and mitochondrial genes, Burbrink and Lawson (2007,
Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 43: 173189) and Pyron and Burbrink (2009, Mol. Phylogenet.
Evol. 52:524-529) demonstrated that the NW Elaphe are part of the New World tribe
Lampropeltini. While further splitting of Pantherophis has been proposed (Collins and
Taggart, 2008; J. Kansas Herp. 26:16-18), the use of Pantherophis has helped stabilize
65
the classification of New World ratsnakes for nearly a decade. Thus, we refrain from
further division of the genus.
Using mitochondrial data, Burbrink (2002, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 25: 465476)
found P. guttatus to comprise three clades, which were elevated to the species level.
The subspecies P. g. meahllmorum was not found to be a distinct lineage, and was
synonymized with P. emoryi.
Using mitochondrial data, Burbrink (2002, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 25: 465476) found
P. guttatus to comprise three distinct lineages, which were elevated to species level. The
name P. guttatus was restricted to populations east of the Mississippi River.
Conant (1940, Herpetologica 2: 2) recognized two forms of foxsnakes, one on each side
of a geographic disjunction (basically all of Michigan and parts of Indiana and Ohio) with
the western form as Pantherophis vulpinus vulpinus and the eastern form as P. v. gloydi.
Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 4243) elevated gloydi to specific status because of
its geographic disjunction from vulpinus and the characters noted by Conant (1940,
Herpetologica 2: 2). Crother et al. (2011, ISRN Zoology, doi:10.5402/2011/436049)
supported the concept of two species, but discovered that the species boundary was the
Mississippi River and not the disjunction. The type locality of P. vulpinus is east of the
Mississippi River and thus the appropriate available name for the eastern form, leaving
the western form unnamed. An interesting side note is that faster evolving microsatellite
data reveal a population level separation associated with the geographic hiatus (Row et
al., 2011, J Evol. Biol., in press).
Using mitochondrial data, Burbrink (2002, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 25: 465476) found
P. guttatus to comprise three distinct lineages, which were elevated to species level. The
populations in western Louisiana and eastern Texas were named P. slowinskii.
The correct spelling of the specific epithet is platura because Pelamis is feminine (Lanza
and Boscherini, 2000, Tropical Zoology 13: 327-329; Bhme, 2003, Salamandra 39: 124).
66
McDiarmid and McCleary (1993, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept.: 579.15), argued that the four
subspecies of P. browni and five subspecies of P. decurtatus not be recognized. Gardner
and Mendelson (2004, J. Herpetol. 38: 187196), based on morphological data, also
concluded that subspecies of P. decurtatus should not be recognized.
Using mitochondrial data, Rodrguez-Robles et al. (2000, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 14:
3550) corroborated the current classification of United States Pituophis into three
species: melanoleucus, catenifer, and ruthveni. However, the recognition of ruthveni
rendered catenifer paraphyletic. Thus, given further study of this group, Pituophis may
undergo taxonomic revision in the near future.
Rodriguez-Robles et al. (2000, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 14: 3550) discovered significant
internal structuring among P. catenifer populations using mitochondrial data, which may
signify the existence of additional species, though they did not attempt reclassification.
Pending further study, we retain the present subspecific designations for the group.
Reichling (1995, J. Herpetol. 29: 186198) concluded that ruthveni is a distinct species.
Rodriguez-Robles et al. (2000, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 14: 3550) argued for the
recognition of P. ruthveni, despite lack of significant or independent differentiation from
some populations of P. c. sayi using mitochondrial data.
Alfaro and Arnold (2001, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 21: 408423) used DNA sequence data
and found the genus to be polyphyletic. This conclusion corroborates the allozyme-based
hypothesis of Lawson (1985, Ph.D. dissertation, Louisiana State University). Taxonomic
change is necessary for this genus, but Alfaro and Arnold recommended against such
change pending further investigation of New World natricine relationships.
67
Adalsteinsson et al. (2009, Zootaxa 2224: 1-50) demonstrated that the former genus
Leptotyphlops was composed of two large clades each composed Old World or New
World taxa. The type for the genus Leptotyphlops is associated with Old World taxa,
leaving the clade of North and Central American threadsnakes unnamed. The genus Rena
has been restored to this group.
Dixon and Vaughan (2003, Texas J. Sci. 55: 324), using morphological data, elevated R.
d. dissectus to species status, and diagnosed three subspecies within the nominate race,
one of which remains unnamed.
Manier (2004, Biol. J. Linn. Soc., 83: 6585), in a detailed morphological analysis,
concluded that no subspecies should be recognized.
Recognition of the species S. deserticola was made without justification by Bogert and
Degenhardt (1961, Am. Mus. Novit. 2064: 13). Bogert (1985, Snake Syst. Newsl. Nov.
no. 3) explained that the usage was based on characters discovered previously (Bogert,
1945, Am. Mus. Novit. 1285: 114) and on the absence of any intergrades. Although
Bogert may be correct, we await a study to demonstrate it and retain S. h. deserticola as a
subspeceis of S. hexalepis.
68
The spelling of the standard English name has been changed from Mojave to Mohave
for consistency with other names in the list (see note for Crotalus scutulatus).
Senticolis is more closely related to the New World tribe Lampropeltini than it is to the
Old World genus Elaphe (Keogh, 1996, Herpetologica 52: 406416; Utiger et al., 2002,
Russian J. Herpetol. 9: 105124; Burbrink and Lawson, 2007, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 43:
173189 and Pyron and Burbrink, 2009, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 52: 524-529)
Kubatko et al. (2011 Syst. Biol. 60) used a multigene data set to infer two clades
among the three previously recognized subspecies. One clade contained the eastern
subspecies (S. c. catenatus) and the other clade contained the two western subspecies (S.
c. tergeminus and S. c. edwardsii). Kubatko et al. (op. cit.) recommended elevating S. c.
catenatus. However, if the recommendation is followed, it would also require elevating
S. c. tergeminus and the formation of three new combinations. In addition, Holycross et
al. (2008, Copeia, 2008: 421-424) discovered that S. c. tergeminus is actually subsumed
by S. c. catenatus because the type locality of catenatus is within the range of tergeminus,
and that the name Crotalus massassaugus Kirtland, 1838 would be the available and
valid name for the eastern subspecies. As such, tergeminus is not currently a valid name
and if the Kubatko et al. recommendation is followed, the specific epithet for the eastern
form would be massassaugus. A petition to the ICZN (Crother et al., in review) to retain
the names catenatus and tergeminus and to allow the designation of a neotype of S.
catenatus and S. tergeminus has been submitted. Therefore, we await a full peer reviewed
taxonomic treatment of this group before recommending a new taxonomy.
Gloyd (1935, Occ. Papers Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan 322: 17) found S. m. barbouri
distinct from the other two races by having the lateral spots in 3 series vs. 12 series for
the other two.
69
No evidence of separate lineages has been found between the sympatric brown and grey
color morphs (Grudzien and Owens, 1991, J. Herpetol. 25: 9092).
Christman (1980, Bull. Florida St. Mus. 25: 157256) presented evidence, allopatric with
no morphological convergence in proximal populations, to suggest species status for
victa.
The taxonomic status of T. cucullata and T. diabola has been problematic. They have
been alternately synonymized (Degenhardt et al., 1976, Texas J. Sci. 17: 225234; Hillis
and Campbell, 1982, Southwest. Nat. 27: 220221; Irwin and Collins, 1995, Herpetol.
Rev. 26: 47) or elevated to species (Collins, 1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 4243). We follow
the most recent proposals from Wilson (1999, Smithsonian Inform. Serv. 122: 134) and
Dixon et al. (2000, Southwest Nat. 45) who both recognized T. cucullata as a species
distinct from T. rubra (extralimital) and synonymized T. diabola with the former.
Cole and Hardy (1981, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 17: 201284) noted local geographic
variation but did not recognize any available subspecies of the many disjunct populations.
70
The specific and infraspecific status of the taxa listed below is based on Rossman et al.
(1996, The Garter Snakes: Evolution and Ecology, Univ. Oklahoma Press).
Rossman and Stewart (1987, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Louisiana St. Univ. 63: 125)
recognized atratus as distinct from T. couchii and recommended against recognizing T. a.
aquaticus.
Using mitochondrial data, Bronikowski and Arnold (2001, Copeia 2001: 508513)
identified several clades within T. elegans that did not, in some cases, follow phenotypic
subspecies boundaries. Hammerson (1999, Amphibians and Reptiles of Colorado. 2nd
ed. University of Colorado Press, Boulder) found phenotypes assignable to T. e. arizonae
and T. e. vascotanneri outside of their purported distributions within Colorado, and
recommended that the two names be synonymized with T. e. vagrans. Hammersons data
supported similar action for Arizona and New Mexico populations as well (J. Boundy,
pers. obs.). Thus, we tentatively retain three subspecies.
The extralimital T. digueti was synonymized with T. hammondi by McGuire and Grismer
(1993, Herpetologica 49: 354365).
71
Based on scale microstructure, Chiasson and Lowe (1989, J. Herpetol. 23: 109118)
suggested this taxon be moved from Thamnophis to Nerodia. De Queiroz and Lawson
(1994, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 53: 209229) rejected the suggested reallocation, based on their
finding that rufipunctatus is nested within Thamnophis.
Analyses of mitochondrial data suggest that this species may be composed of multiple
independently evolving lineages often not concordant with the subspecific taxonomy (F.
Burbrink, pers. comm.).
Benton (1980, Zool. J. Linnaean Soc. 68: 307323) synonymized T. s. semifasciatus with
the nominate race, but Rossman et al. (1996, The Gartersnakes. Evolution and Ecology,
Univ. Oklahoma Press) resurrected T. s. semifasciatus.
Devitt et al. (2008, Copeia 2008: 370-387) recognized six species (three extralimital),
including T. lambda and T. lyrophanes based on morphological and mitochondrial data.
72
Lawson (1985, Ph.D. dissertation, Louisiana St. Univ.) argued for the possibility that
Virginia is paraphyletic with respect to Tropidoclonion and suggested expanding the
genus Virginia to include Tropidoclonion lineatum. Collins (1991, Herpetol. Rev. 22: 42
43) elevated pulchra to specific status. Because no supporting data, aside from allopatric
distribution, were published in his list, we retain V. valeriae pulchra.
CrocodiliaCROCODILIANS
Brian I. Crother
Department of Biology, Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, LA
70402
Alligator Cuvier, 1807ALLIGATORS
A. mississippiensis (Daudin, 1802 1801)American Alligator
Crocodylus Laurenti, 1768CROCODILES
C. acutus Cuvier, 1807American Crocodile
73
TestudinesTurtles
John B. Iverson1 (Chair), Peter A. Meylan2, Michael E. Seidel3
Department of Biology, Earlham College, Richmond, IN 47374-4095
Department of Natural Sciences, Eckerd College, 4200 54th Ave. S, St.
Petersburg, FL 33711
3
4430 Richmond Park Dr E., Jacksonville, FL 32224
1
2
Spinks and Shaffer (2005, Mol. Ecol. 14: 20472064) have argued that the previously
recognized subspecies A. m. pallida is not supported on molecular grounds and hence
should be abandoned. However, more recent work (Spinks et al., 2010, Mol. Ecol.
19: 542-556) demonstrated deep phylogeographic divergence within the species,
potentially warranting species recognition.
The generic name Apalone Rafinesque was resurrected by Meylan (1987, Bull. Am. Mus.
Nat. Hist. 186: 1101) for the monophyletic group of softshell turtles consisting of
Apalone ferox, A. mutica and A. spinifera that was identified by a phylogenetic analysis
of living softshells. Meylans revised taxonomy has been widely adopted (e.g.,
Iverson, 1992, A Revised Checklist with Distribution Maps of the Turtles of the
World, Privately printed; Conant and Collins, 1992, A Field Guide to Reptiles and
Amphibians: Eastern and Central North America, Houghton Mifflin Co.; Collins,
1997, SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 25; Ernst and Barbour, 1989, Turtles of the World,
Smithsonian Instit. Press). Authors who continue to use Trionyx for species of Apalone
(e.g., Ernst et al., 1994, Turtles of the United States and Canada, Smithsonian Instit.
Press; Plummer, 1997, Chel. Conserv. Biol. 2: 514520) cite Webb, (1990, Cat.
Am. Amphib. Rept. 487: 17) who considered that total acceptance of his [Meylan,
1987, op cit.] classification is premature. However, no alternative hypothesis
of relationships for these species or alternative taxonomy has been offered. To our
knowledge, there is no evidence that Apalone is not monophyletic (e.g., see Engstrom
et al., 2004, Syst. Biol. 53: 693711). In addition, as pointed out by Meylan (1996,
Herpetol. Rev. 27: 4142), the North American softshells are distinctive morphologically
and biologically, and diverged from their closest relatives during the Cretaceous
(Gardiner et al., 1995, Can. J. Earth Sci. 32: 631643). The content of Apalone basically
follows Webb (1962, Univ. Kansas Publ. Mus. Nat. Hist. 13: 429611).
A. ferox (Schneider, 1783)Florida Softshell
A. mutica (LeSueur, 1827)Smooth Softshell
A. m. mutica (LeSueur, 1827)Midland Smooth Softshell
A. m. calvata (Webb, 1959)Gulf Coast Smooth Softshell
A. spinifera (LeSueur, 1827)Spiny Softshell
A. s. spinifera (LeSueur, 1827)Eastern Spiny Softshell
A. s. aspera (Agassiz, 1857)Gulf Coast Spiny Softshell
A. s. emoryi (Agassiz, 1857)Texas Spiny Softshell
74
Content follows McGaugh et al. (2008, Zoologica Scripta 37: 289-304), who
synonymized A. s. hartwegi with A. s. spinifera.
This comment applies to all the standard English names of the sea turtles listed herein.
We have returned to the use of sea turtles (rather than seaturtles) as part of the
standard English name for marine turtles. The combined name has not been used recently
in the literature.
C. caretta (Linnaeus, 1758)Loggerhead Sea Turtle
The Black Turtle of the Pacific Ocean has been considered a separate species (Chelonia
agassizii) by some authors (e.g., Pritchard and Trebbau, 1984, SSAR Contrib. Herpetol.
2: 1403), a subspecies of Chelonia mydas by others (Kamezaki and Matsui, 1995, J.
Herpetol. 29: 5160), and synonymous with Chelonia mydas by others (e.g., Bowen
et al., 1992, Evolution 46: 865881). We follow Parham and Zug (1996, Marine Turtle
Newsl. 72: 25) and Karl and Bowen (1999, Cons. Biol. 13: 990999) in not recognizing
it taxonomically until more work is done.
This species has previously been called the Common Snapping Turtle (e.g., Collins,
1997, SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 25), but the adjective has been dropped because it might be
misinterpreted as referring to the abundance of the species rather than to its being the
typical, most widespread species of its family. Shaffer et al. (2008; Biology of the
Snapping Turtle, John Hopkins Univ. Press.) provided convincing genetic evidence that
C. serpentina is a single, virtually invariant lineage and hence abandoned the
recognition of the subspecies C. s. osceola Stejneger, 1918.
We follow Vogt and McCoy (1980, Ann. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist. 49: 93102) and Seidel
and Smith (1986, Herpetologica 42: 242248) in restricting this genus to the painted
turtle complex. Starkey et al. (2003, Evolution 57: 119128) have argued that the
southern painted turtle is genetically divergent and hence should be elevated to the
species level. They also questioned the recognition of the remaining subspecies on
genetic grounds, but did not take a position on their abandonment. However, Ernst
et al. (2006, Herpetol. Bull. 95: 6-15) reexamined color patterns and dorsal scute
alignment in Chrysemys and identified intermediate specimens between C. dorsalis and
C. p. marginata and C. p. bellii. Based on these findings Fritz and Havas (2007,
Checklist of Chelonians of the World, Museum of Zoology, Dresden) returned dorsalis to
subspecies rank under C. picta. Until this conflict between genetic and color pattern data
can be resolved, we rely on the genetic data and continue to recognize dorsalis as a full
species.
C. picta (Schneider, 1783)Painted Turtle
75
Work by Bickham et al. (1996, Herpetologica 52: 8997), Burke et al. (1996,
Herpetologica 52: 572584), Lenk et al. (1999, Mol. Ecol. 8: 19111922), Holman and
Fritz (2001, Zoolog. Abhand. Staat. Mus. fr Tierkunde Dresden 51: 331354), Feldman
and Parham (2002, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 22: 388398), Seidel (2002, Copeia 2002:
11181121), Stephens and Wiens (2003, Biol J. Linn. Soc. 79: 577610), Wiens et al.
(2010, Biol. J. Linn Soc. 99: 445-461), and Fritz et al. (2011, Zootaxa 2791: 41-53)
provided ample evidence that the genus Clemmys as previously recognized (e.g.,
McDowell, 1964, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 143: 239279) was paraphyletic with respect
to the sister genera Emys and Emydoidea, and also possibly Terrapene. Two taxonomic
schemes reflecting these relationships are currently in contention. Both would place
sister taxa insculpta and muhlenbergii in the genus Glyptemys and leave guttata in the
monotypic genus Clemmys (both changes are recognized in this list). However, one
scheme (e.g., Feldman and Parham, 2002, op cit.; Spinks and Shaffer, 2005, Mol. Ecol.
14: 20472064) would expand the definition of Emys to include marmorata, blandingii,
orbicularis (European) and trinacris (Sicilian). This would involve two taxonomic
changes and eliminate the genus Emydoidea, which is monotypic as a living taxon, but
polytypic if the fossil record is included (Holman, 2002, Michigan Academician 34:
393394). The other scheme (Holman and Fritz, op cit.; Stephens and Wiens, 2003, op
cit.; Wiens et al. 2010, op cit.; Frtiz et al. 2011, op cit.) involves only one taxonomic
change, placing marmorata in the monotypic genus Actinemys (but see Spinks and
Shaffer, 2005, op. cit., and Spinks et al., 2010, Mol. Ecol. 19: 542-556, who suggest
polytypy in this genus), and retaining the polytypic genus Emydoidea, and the polytypic
genus Emys (for the European forms). The contention hinges on the relative importance
of eliminating monotypic genera versus maintaining taxonomic stability (fewer changes
being preferable). The former is supported primarily by taxonomists who consider
monotypic genera to be redundant names and hence of no value in providing
phylogenetic information. Thus, although the former scheme requires more changes, it
eliminates the genus Emydoidea (which is monotypic if the fossil record is ignored:
Holman, 2002, op. cit), although it retains the monotypic genus Clemmys. Many
proponents of the latter scheme believe that monotypic genera are not taxonomically
redundant but rather reflect evolutionary distinctiveness (see Mayr and Bock, 2002,
J. Zool. Syst. Evol. Research 40: 169194 for a general discussion of the values of
taxonomic stability and recording anagenesis in classification schemes). For the sake of
current stability, and our position that monotypic genera do provide phylogenetic information,
we here follow the second scheme, as recommended by Fritz et al. (2011, op cit.).
Geographic variation in this species was reviewed by Schwartz (1956, Fieldiana Zool. 34
: 461503).
76
E. imbricata (Linnaeus, 1766)Hawksbill Sea Turtle
E. i. bissa (Rppell, 1835)Pacific Hawksbill Sea Turtle
E. i. imbricata (Linnaeus, 1766)Atlantic Hawksbill Sea Turtle
Although many recent authors have abandoned use of Atlantic versus Indo-Pacific
Ocean subspecies (Meylan, 2006, Chelon. Res. Monogr. 3: 105127), the names have
not been formally synonymized. Because mitochondrial genome comparisons by
Okayama et al. (1999, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 3: 362367) suggested genetic divergence
between the Caribbean and Indo-Pacific populations, we retain the subspecies names
pending further study.
We follow Crumly (1994, Fish Wildlife Res. 13: 737) in applying the name Gopherus to
all of the living North American testudinids (one of which is extralimital).
See note under G. morafkai. The spelling of the standard English name has been changed
from Mojave to Mohave for consistency with other names in the list (see note for
Crotalus scutulatus).
G. berlandieri (Agassiz, 1857)Texas Tortoise
G. morafkai Murphy, Berry, Edwards, Leviton, Lathrop, and Riedle,
2011Sonoran Desert Tortoise
This cryptic species was formerly included in G. agassizii (Murphy et al., 2011, ZooKeys
113: 39-71). The original description noted that G. morafkai occurs in the Sonoran
desert as well as part of the Mohave Desert and part of the Sinaloan thornscrub, and
that the restricted G. agassizii occurs in the Mohave Desert as well as part of the Sonoran
Desert. Hence, the authors recommended the patronyms Morafkas Desert Tortoise and
Agassizs Desert Tortoise, respectively, rather than the geographic names Sonoran Desert
Tortoise (often abbreviated SDT) and Mohave Desert Tortoise (MDT), reflecting their
primary distributions. However, because the latter names have long been used as
standard names for these two populations (including legislation by the US Fish and
Wildlife Service), and because of the potential for confusion of the abbreviation for
77
Morafkas Desert Tortoise (also MDT) with that for the Mohave Desert Tortoise, we
support the use of the traditional geographic standard names.
Evidence for monophyly and content of this genus was reviewed by Dobie (1981, Tulane
Stud. Zool. Bot. 23: 85), Lamb and Osentoski (1997, J. Herpetol. 31: 258265), and
Stephens and Wiens (2003, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 79: 577610).
Ennen et al. (2010, J. Herpetol. 44: 544-554) argued for the continued recognition of this
species and the closely related G. oculifera, despite their limited genetic divergence.
We have changed the name from Common Map Turtle because of the possibility that the
word common might be misinterpreted to imply abundance rather than to the fact that it
has a broad geographic distribution.
G. gibbonsi Lovich and McCoy, 1992Pascagoula Map Turtle
G. nigrinoda Cagle, 1954Black-knobbed Map Turtle
G. n. delticola Folkerts and Mount, 1969Southern Black-knobbed
Map Turtle
G. n. nigrinoda Cagle, 1954Northern Black-knobbed Map Turtle
G. oculifera (Baur, 1890)Ringed Map Turtle
G. ouachitensis Cagle, 1953Southern Map Turtle
G. o. ouachitensis Cagle, 1953Ouachita Map Turtle
G. o. sabinensis Cagle, 1953Sabine Map Turtle
It has been suggested (Ward, 1980, Ph.D. dissertation, North Carolina State Univ.) that
this subspecies should be recognized as a species. Recent molecular work (Stephens
and Wiens, 2003, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 79: 577610) provided some support for that
position, but further study is necessary.
G. pearlensis Ennen, Lovich, Kreiser, Selman, and Qualls, 2010Pearl
River Map Turtle
This cryptic species was formerly included in G. gibbonsi (Ennen et al., 2010, Chel.
Conserv. Biol. 9: 98-113).
G. pseudogeographica (Gray, 1831)False Map Turtle
G. p. kohnii (Baur, 1890)Mississippi Map Turtle
G. p. pseudogeographica (Gray, 1831)Northern False Map Turtle
G. pulchra Baur, 1893Alabama Map Turtle
G. versa Stejneger, 1925Texas Map Turtle
Kinosternon Spix, 1824AMERICAN Mud Turtles
Iverson (1991, Herpetol. Monog. 5: 127) is the most recent reviewer of this genus. See
also comment under Sternotherus.
Formerly a subspecies of K. flavescens, Serb et al. (2001, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 18:
78
149162) demonstrated that including this taxon in K. flavescens made the latter
The validity of the subspecies Kinosternon flavescens spooneri Smith, 1951 (Illinois Mud
Turtle) has been questioned on morphological and molecular grounds by Houseal et al.
(1982, Copeia 1982: 567580), Berry and Berry (1984, Ann. Carnegie Mus. Nat. Hist.
53: 185206), and Serb et al. (2001, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 18: 149162).
Collins (1997, SSAR Herpetol. Circ. 25) suggested the name Mexican Mud Turtle for
this turtle, but that name is generally applied to Kinosternon integrum (Iverson et al.,
1998, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 652).
See note under Caretta. Bowen et al. (1991, Nature 352: 709) reviewed variation within
this genus.
Webb (1995, Chelonian Conserv. Biol. 1: 322323) demonstrated that the name
Macrochelys Gray has precedence over the name Macroclemys Gray (contra Smith,
1955, Herpetologica 11: 16). Both mtDNA and microsatellite data (Roman et al., 1999,
Conserv. Biol. 13: 135-142; Echelle et al., 2010, Conserv. Genetics 11: 1375-1387)
confirm that the Suwannee River basin population of Alligator Snapping Turtles
is genetically distinct from other populations, and likely to be recognized taxonomically.
Dobie (1981, Tulane Stud. Zool. Bot. 23: 85) and Lamb and Osentoski (1997, J. Herpetol.
31: 258265) reviewed evidence for monophyly and content of this genus.
A detailed study of the geographic variation of these turtles would prove highly
informative.
79
Content of this genus follows Seidel and Smith (1996, Herpetologica 42: 242248).
Only two subspecies are recognized here: Pseudemys concinna concinna, and P. c.
floridana. Seidel (1994, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 117130) demonstrated that P. c.
hieroglyphica and P. c. metteri are not distinct and represent only clinal variation; he
elevated P. c. suwanniensis to species status (see separate entry); and he relegated P.
floridana to a subspecies of P. concinna (but see comments below). The taxonomy
adopted here has recently been followed by Ernst and Lovich (2009, Turtles of the United
States and Canada. Second Edition. John Hopkins Univ. Press, Baltimore).
This subspecies was formerly recognized as Pseudemys floridana floridana, but Seidel
(1994, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 117130) transferred it to Pseudemys concinna. Jackson
(1995, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 329333) objected to this based on observations that
concinna and floridana are sympatric in northern Florida and South Carolina. Seidel
(1995, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 333-336) countered that the two forms may be
macrosympatric at some locations, but that they intergrade in other areas. Based on
morphometric, osteological, biochemical, and pigmentation studies, Seidel (1994,
Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 117130) found no character which reliably separates the
two forms in many transition areas (intergrade zones) between the coastal plain and
piedmont of the Atlantic slope. However, the two forms are microsympatic throughout
the panhandle of Florida (Meylan, 2006, Chelon. Res. Monogr. 3: 2836). Jackson
(2006, Chelon. Res. Monogr. 3: 325337), Thomas and Jansen (2006, Chelon. Res.
Monogr. 3: 338347), and Jensen et al. (2008, Amphibians and Reptiles of Georgia. Univ.
Georgia Press, Athens) do not follow this taxonomy, and recognize floridana and
concinna as separate species. A thorough, range-wide phylogeographic study of the
ecology, morphology, and genetics (mitochondrial and nuclear DNA) is needed to settle
the controversies in the taxonomy of this species complex.
This form was originally described by Ward (1984, Spec. Pub. Mus. Texas Tech. Univ.
21: 150) as a subpecies of P. concinna, but it was elevated to species status by Ernst
(1990, Cat. Am. Amphib. Rept. 461: 12). That change is appropriate given its clear
allopatry with Pseudemys concinna (Ward, 1984, Cat. Am. Amph. Rept. 487: 17), its
morphological distinctiveness (Seidel, 1994, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 117130), and its
80
divergent DNA (Starkey, 1997, Ph.D. dissertation, Texas A&M Univ.; Stephens and
Wiens, 2003, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 79: 577610).
Seidel (1994, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1: 117130) elevated this form from a subspecies
of P. concinna to a species based on his belief that it is allopatric or parapatric with other
members of the concinna group. However, Jackson (1995, Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 1:
329333) believed that it may intergrade with P. c. concinna in northern Florida and
thus does not deserve species status. Recent availability of material from the Gulf
Hammock region of northwest Florida is reviewed by Jackson (2006, Chelon. Res
Monogr. 3: 325337), who recommended recognition of this form as a subspecies of P.
concinna.
The monophyly of the genus Sternotherus was questioned by Seidel et al. (1986, Copeia
1986: 285294) and Iverson (1991, Herpetol. Monogr. 5: 127); however, Iverson (1998,
Chelon. Conserv. Biol. 3: 113117) provided support for its monophyly.
S. carinatus (Gray, 1855)Razor-backed Musk Turtle
S. depressus Tinkle and Webb, 1955Flattened Musk Turtle
S. minor (Agassiz, 1857)Loggerhead Musk Turtle
S. m. minor (Agassiz, 1857)Eastern Loggerhead Musk Turtle
S. m. peltifer Smith and Glass, 1947Stripe-necked Musk Turtle
S. odoratus (Latreille, in Sonnini and Latreille, 1801)Eastern Musk Turtle
We have changed the name from Common Musk Turtle because of the possibility that the
word common might be misinterpreted to imply abundance rather than to the fact that it
has a broad range.
A review of the variation in this genus appeared in Dodd (2001, North American Box
Turtles, Univ. Oklahoma Press, Norman). Based on molecular and morphological
evidence, Butler et al. (2011, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 102: 889901) concluded that the Florida
Box Turtle (formerly T. carolina bauri) should be elevated to full species status, and that
the Gulf Coast Box Turtle (formerly T. c. major) represents an intergrade population
between the Eastern Box Turtle T. c. carolina and the Pleistocene Box Turtle (formerly
T. c. putnami). They recommend that the name T. c. major only be applied to the
Pleistocene form, and that additional study of the Gulf Coast populations is warranted.
81
T. baurii Taylor, 1894)Florida Box Turtle
T. carolina (Linnaeus, 1758)Eastern Box Turtle
T. c. carolina (Linnaeus, 1758)Woodland Box Turtle
T. c. triunguis (Agassiz, 1857)Three-toed Box Turtle
T. ornata (Agassiz, 1857)Ornate Box Turtle
T. o. luteola Smith and Ramsey, 1952Desert Box Turtle
T. o. ornata (Agassiz, 1857)Plains Box Turtle
Trachemys Agassiz, 1857Sliders
Content of this genus follows Seidel and Smith (1996, Herpetologica 42: 242248) and
Seidel (2002, J. Herpetol. 36: 285292).
Price and Hillis (1989, First World Congr. Herpetol. Abstract), Seidel et al. (1999,
Herpetologica 55: 470487), and Seidel (2002, J. Herpetol. 36: 285292) provided
evidence for the specific recognition of this form. Reviewed by Stuart and Ernst (2004,
Cat. Amer. Amphib. Rept. 787).
82
Alien Species
Fred Kraus
Department of Natural Sciences, Bishop Museum, 1525 Bernice St. Honolulu,
HI 96817
Alien species are those species established outside their native ranges by the
activities of humans, whether done intentionally or not. Prior versions of this
check-list referred to these species as introduced. I have changed that usage
here because an introduction need not imply successful establishment; many
additional species have been introduced to the United States that have not
become established and are not included here. Species covered in this treatment
are those known to be extra-territorial to the United States (e.g., Green Iguana,
Iguana iguana) and those whose native status within the United States may be
open to question (e.g., Bark Anole, Anolis distichus in South Florida).
Inclusion in this list is based on evidence or claims of establishment
within the United States that have been presented in the literature and which
seem to meet the criteria given by Meshaka et al. (2004, The Exotic Amphibians
and Reptiles of Florida. Krieger Publishing Co., Malabar, Florida). But
scientific standards for reporting newly established alien species are minimal,
evidence adduced in favor of these claims varies, correction of published errors
is often delayed, and, consequently, some published claims may not be factually
accurate. Because of these problems, I note instances known to me for which
published claims suggesting establishment are nonetheless disputed or uncertain.
Some of the countervailing evidence calling these reports into question is not yet
presented in the literature but mention of such instances is included here to
highlight where doubt is reasonable. The presence of these several cases argues
for the need to have tighter editorial accountability when publishing such
claims.
Excluded from this list are those species native within the boundaries of the
United States that have been translocated by humans elsewhere in the country.
Many such instances are known and include, for example, the Cane Toad
(Rhinella marina) and Bullfrog (Lithobates catesbeianus). Also excluded are
those alien species introduced to the United States but never established
(innumerable examples) and those populations previously established but now
extinct, such as an earlier Italian Wall lizard (Podarcis sicula) colony that
persisted for decades in Pennsylvania (Kauffeld, 1931, Copeia 1931: 163164;
Conant, 1959, Copeia 1959: 335336). Finally, the literature includes mention
of additional species that may be established in the United States but for
which evidence of self-sustaining populations is less compelling or is not
discussed in the original publications. Many of these reports are mentioned
in Meshaka et al. (2004, The Exotic Amphibians and Reptiles of Florida, Krieger
Publishing Co., Malabar, Florida).
83
A literature search through July 2011 was used to provide a list of states for
which alien species are known to occur. Supporting literature for most of these
introductions is available in Kraus (2009, Alien reptiles and amphibians: a
scientific compendium and analysis. Springer Science and Business Media
B.V., Dordrecht, Netherlands). Sixty-nine to seventy-two alien species of
amphibians and reptiles are reported to be established in the United States.
Taxonomically, most of these are lizards (n = 6061), followed by anurans (n
= 6), snakes (n = 5), turtles (n = 2), and crocodilians (n = 1). Forty-four of these
species are from the Old World and thirty-one from the New World.
Alien Species ANURANS
Dendrobates Wagler, 1830POISON DART FROGS
The most recent review of this genus and its relatives is Grant et al. (2006, Bull. Amer.
Mus. Nat. Hist. 299: 1262).
The Green-and-black Poison Dart Frog is native to Central America and Colombia and is
established in Hawaii.
The Coqu is native to Puerto Rico, has been reported from four states, and is reported
as established in California, Florida and Hawaii. It is widely established on Hawaii
Island but is more restricted and the target of eradication efforts on the other Hawaiian
Islands. Populations in California and Florida appear to be limited to nurseries
(Dalrymple, 1994, Non-indigenous Amphibians and Reptiles in Florida in Schmitz,
D.C. and T.C. Brown [eds.], An Assessment of Invasive Non-indigenous Species in
Floridas Public Lands, Technical Rpt. TSS-94-100. Florida Department of Env.
Protection, Tallahassee, FL., Pp. 6778; K. Krysko, pers. comm.; D. Schnabel,
pers. comm.), it is uncertain to what extent they are maintained by constant reintroduction, and they perhaps should not truly be considered established.
The Greenhouse Frog is native to Cuba, the Bahamas, and Cayman Islands and is
established in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
This genus of Asian frogs was recently removed from a polyphyletic Rana by Frost et
al. (2006, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 297).
The Cuban Treefrog is native to Cuba, the Bahamas, and Cayman Islands, has been
84
The African Clawed Frog is native to southern Africa, has been reported from nine states,
and is established in Arizona and California.
The African Rainbow Lizard is native to Africa and is established in Florida. Subspecific
identification was provided for five populations by Enge et al. (2004, Florida Scientist
67: 303310).
The Giant Ameiva is native to South America and is established in Florida. Both Ameiva
ameiva ameiva and A. a. petersi have been claimed to be released in Florida (King and
Krakauer, 1966, Quart. J. Fla. Acad. Sci. 29: 144154). The taxonomic status of these
populations vis vis the next species has recently been clarified (Ugueto and Harvey.,
2011, Herpetol. Monogr. 25: 113170).
The Borriguerro Ameiva is native to northern South America and southern Central
America. It has has been established in Florida since at least the early 1980s, but its
taxonomic identity has only recently been clarified (Ugueto and Harvey., 2011, Herpetol.
Monogr. 25: 113170).
Taxonomy for Anolis follows Williams (1976, Breviora 440: 121) with addition of
subspecies from Schwartz and Henderson (1991, Amphibians and Reptiles of the West
Indies: Descriptions, Distributions, and Natural History, University of Florida Press)
and modifications by Vance (1991, Bull. Maryland Herpetol. Soc. 27: 4389; description
of A. carolinensis seminolus). Some authors (e.g., Guyer and Savage, 1986, Syst. Zool.
35: 509531; 1992, Syst. Biol. 41: 89110; Savage and Guyer, 1989, Amphibia-Reptilia
10: 105116) divide Anolis into the following five genera (assignments of species
covered in this checklist in parentheses): Anolis (carolinensis, chlorocyanus, equestris),
Ctenonotus (cristatellus, cybotes, distichus), Dactyloa, Norops (garmani, sagrei), and
Xiphosurus =Semiurus.
A. (Ctenonotus) cristatellus Dumril and Bibron, 1837Crested Anole
A. c. cristatellus Dumril and Bibron, 1837Puerto Rican Crested
Anole
85
The Puerto Rican Crested Anole is native to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands and
is established in Florida. Subspecific identifications have been given for the Dade County
specimens by Schwartz and Henderson (1988, Contrib. Biol. Geol. Milwaukee Publ.
Mus. 74: 1264; 1991, Amphibians and Reptiles of the West Indies: Descriptions,
Distributions, and Natural History, University of Florida Press).
The Large-headed Anole is native to Hispaniola and the Bahamas and is established in
Florida.
The Dade County population has been identified as A. c. cybotes (Schwartz and
Henderson, 1988, Contrib. Biol. Geol. Milwaukee Pub. Mus. 74: 1264). No subspecific
identification for the Broward County population has been provided.
The Bark Anole is native to Hispaniola, has been reported from two states, and is
established in Florida.
Schwartz (1968, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 137: 255310) reviewed the evidence and
discussed alternative hypotheses concerning the occurrence of Anolis distichus floridanus
in Florida and concluded that this taxon was most likely introduced from Andros Island
in the Bahamas; nevertheless, Wilson and Porras (1983, Univ. Kansas Mus. Nat. Hist.
Spec. Publ. 9: 189) considered it a native component of the Florida herpetofauna.
Although the specimens of A. d. floridanus examined by Schwartz (1968, Bull. Mus.
Comp. Zool. 137: 255310) are distinguishable from those of A. d. dominicensis, more
recent samples of Bark Anoles from Florida form a continuum, suggesting intergradation
between the two subspecies (Miyamoto et al., 1986, Copeia 1986: 7686).
The Knight Anole is native to Cuba and is established in Florida and Hawaii.
The subspecific identification for the Florida population was given by Schwartz and
Henderson (1988, Contrib. Biol. Geol. Milwaukee Pub. Mus. 74: 1264; 1991,
Amphibians and Reptiles of the West Indies: Descriptions, Distributions, and Natural
History, University of Florida Press); that for the Hawaiian population was given by
Lazell and McKeown (1998, Bull. Chicago Herpetol. Soc. 33: 181).
The Comb Anole is native to Marie-Galante. Bartlett (1994, Reptile and Amphibian
Magazine Mar/Apr.: 5673, 103109) and Bartlett and Bartlett (1999, A Field Guide to
Florida Reptiles and Amphibians. Gulf Publishing Co., Houston, Texas) presented
86
evidence of reproduction over several years in Florida in the early 1990s but population
persistence has been disputed by Meshaka et al. (2004, The Exotic Amphibians and
Reptiles of Florida. Krieger Publishing Co., Malabar, Florida), K. Enge (pers. comm.),
and K. Krysko (pers. comm.), and voucher specimens are lacking.
The Brown Anole is native to Cuba and the Bahamas, has been reported from 13 states,
and is established in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, North Carolina,
South Carolina, and Texas.
According to Conant and Collins (1991, Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and
Central North America, Houghton Mifflin Co.), two subspecies, A. s. sagrei and
A. s. ordinatus were introduced to southern Florida, but they can no longer be
distinguished from one another and differ from both original races. Lee (1992, Copeia
1992: 942954) presented evidence that the Florida populations bear a much stronger
phenotypic resemblance to populations from Cuba (A. s. sagrei) than to those from
the Bahamas (A. s. ordinatus). Kolbe et al. (2004, Nature 431: 177181) present
evidence for multiple introductions of this species from Cuba to Florida, which suggests
that A. s. greyi may also have been involved.
The St. Vincent Bush Anole is native to St. Vincent, Lesser Antilles, and is established in
Florida.
The Brown Basilisk is native to Central and northern South America and is established in
Florida.
The English name is derived from the brilliant orange or crimson colors that breeding
males develop around the head and shoulders.
87
The Variable Bloodsucker is native to southern and southeastern Asia and is established
in Florida. The specific epithet is in quotation marks because Zug et al. (2006, Proc. Cal.
Acad. Sci. 57: 3568) demonstrated that C. versicolor is a complex of several species.
The introduced population has yet to be identified in light of this new information.
The Ocellated Skink is native to the Mediterranean region, Middle East, and northern
Africa and is established in Florida.
The Veiled Chameleon is native to the southwestern Arabian Peninsula and is established
in Florida and Hawaii.
Bauer and Lamb (2005, African J. Herpetol. 54: 105129) revised Pachydactylus and
placed the bibronii group in Chondrodactylus.
Taxonomy for Cnemidophorus follows Peters and Donoso-Barros (1970, Bull. United
States Natl. Mus. 297(Part II): 1293). Reeder et al. (2002, Am. Mus. Novit. 3365: 161)
presented evidence that Cnemidophorus, even after the removal of Aspidoscelis, is not
monophyletic, although they did not propose a taxonomic change to rectify this situation.
I have placed the name Cnemidophorus in quotation marks to indicate the apparently
non-monophyletic status of the taxon.
The Rainbow Whiptail is native to South America and is established in Florida. Several
species, both uni- and bisexual, have been described for different parts of the taxon that
was formerly known as C. lemniscatus (Cole and Dessauer, 1993, Am. Mus. Novit.
3081: 130; Markezich et al., 1997, Am. Mus. Novit. 3207: 160), and the introduced
population has not yet been associated with one or more of those species.
The Pacific Snake-eyed Skink is native to many Pacific islands and is established in
Hawaii.
88
The Rough-tailed Gecko is native to the Middle East and northeastern Africa and is
established in Texas.
Taxonomy for Emoia cyanura and E. impar follows Ineich and Zug (1991, Copeia 1991:
11321136).
The Copper-tailed Skink is native to the Pacific islands and is established in Hawaii.
The Azure-tailed Skink is native to the Pacific islands and is established in Hawaii.
The Mutilating Gecko is native from South Asia through the Pacific islands, has been
reported from three states, and is established in Hawaii. The date of publication of the
name Hemidactylus mutilatus (=Gehyra mutilata) is sometimes given as 1835 (e.g.,
Kluge, 1991, Smithsonian Herpetol. Info. Serv. 85: 135) presumably based on the
idea that the species was first described in a publication by Wiegmann in Nova Acta
Acad. Caes. Leop. Carol. Nat. Cur. the date of which is either 1834 or 1835; however
the first valid use of the name is in Wiegmann (1834, Herpetologica Mexicana; see Bauer
and Adler, 2001, Arch. Nat. Hist., 28: 313326 for a discussion of the dates of the
relevant publications).
89
The Tokay Gecko is native to Southeast Asia and has been introduced to Florida and
Hawaii. It is established in Florida but the single known incipient population in Hawaii
is apparently now eradicated.
The Yellow-headed Gecko is native to Central and South America and the Caribbean and
is established in Florida.
The Common House Gecko is native to South and Southeast Asia and is established in
Florida, Hawaii, and Texas.
The Indo-Pacific Gecko is native to South and Southeast Asia, has been reported from
five states, and is established in Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, and Texas.
The Wood Slave is native to Africa (and perhaps parts of South America and the
Caribbean, cf. Kluge, 1969, Misc. Publ. Univ. Michigan Mus. Zool. 138: 178) and is
established in Florida.
The Asian Flat-tailed House Gecko is native to Southeast Asia and is established in
Florida. This species was recently removed from Cosymbotus by Carranza and Arnold
(2006, Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 38: 531545).
The Mediterranean Gecko is native to the Mediterranean region, has been reported
from 22 states, and is established in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida,
Georgia, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New
Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, and Virginia.
The Indo-Pacific Tree Gecko is native to Southeast Asia and the Pacific, has been
reported from two states, and is established in Hawaii.
The Green Iguana is native to Central and South America, has been reported from six
states, and is established in Florida and Hawaii.
90
The Western Green Lacerta is native to Western Europe, has been reported from two
states, and is established in Kansas.
The Northern Curly-tailed Lizard is native to Cuba, Bahamas, and the Cayman Islands
and is established in Florida.
The Mourning Gecko is native from South Asia through much of the Pacific, has been
reported from four states, and is established in Florida and Hawaii. This taxon is a
unisexual complex of diploid and triploid populations of apparently independent
origins (Moritz et al., 1993, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 48: 113133; Volobouev, 1994,
Biogeographica 70: 14).
The Moth Skink is native to some of the Pacific Islands and is established in Hawaii.
The Brown Mabuya is native to South and Southeast Asia and is established in Florida.
The Madagascar Day Gecko is native to Madagascar and is established in Florida and
Hawaii. Formerly referred to P. madagascariensis Gray, 1831 prior to recent partitioning
of that species (Raxworthy et al., 2007, Syst. Biol. 56: 907923).
91
The Common Wall Lizard is native to Europe, has been reported from four states, and is
established in Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and British Columbia.
The Italian Wall Lizard is native to Europe, has been reported from five states, and is
established in California, Kansas, New Jersey, and New York. It was formerly
established in Pennsylvania but is now extirpated there.
The Ocellated Gecko is native to Cuba, Jamaica, and the Bahamas and is established in
Florida.
The Ashy Gecko is native to Cuba and Hispaniola and is established in Florida.
The Ringed Wall Gecko is native to northern Africa and is established in Florida.
The Moorish Gecko is native to the Mediterranean region, has been reported from
four states, is established in Florida, and is claimed to be established in California
(Mahrdt, 1998, Herpetol. Rev. 29: 52).
The African Five-lined Skink is native to a wide band of sub-Saharan Africa and is
established in Florida.
The Argentine Giant Tegu is native to South America and is established in Florida.
The Nile Monitor is native to Africa, has been reported from two states, and is established
in Florida.
The Javanese File Snake is native to Southeast Asia and is established in Florida.
The Boa Constrictor is native to Central and South America, has been reported from 11
states, and is established in Florida.
92
P. molurus (Linnaeus, 1758)Indian Python
P. m. bivittatus Kuhl, 1820Burmese Python
The Burmese Python is native to South and Southeast Asia, has been reported from six
states, and is established in Florida.
The Northern African Rock Python is native to sub-Saharan Africa and is established in
Florida.
The Brahminy Blindsnake is likely native to South Asia, has been reported from ten
states, and is established in Alabama, California, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, Texas, and Virginia.
The Spectacled Caiman is native to South America, has been reported from seven states,
and is established in Florida.
The Wattle-necked Softshell is native to southeastern China and northern Vietnam, has
been reported from two states, and is established in Hawaii.
The Chinese Softshell is native to eastern Asia, has been reported from three states, and is
established in Hawaii.
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CONTRIBUTIONS TO HERPETOLOGY
Book-length monographs, comprising taxonomic revisions, results of symposia,
and other major works. Pre-publication discount to Society members.
Vol. 16. Slithy Toves: Illustrated Classic Herpetological Books at the University
of Kansas in Pictures and Conversations, by Sally Haines. 2000. A trea
sure trove of some of the finest illustrations of amphibians and reptiles ever
produced, dating from the 16th to early 20th centuries. 190 p., 84 color
photographs. Stiff paper cover $60.00.
Vol. 17. The Herpetofauna of New Caledonia, by Aaron M. Bauer and Ross A.
Sadlier. French translations by Ivan Ineich. 2000. 322 p., 47 maps, 63
figures, 189 color photographs of animals and habitats. Clothbound $60.00.
Vol. 18. The Hylid Frogs of Middle America, expanded edition, by William E.
Duellman. 2001. Review of the 165 hylid species from Mexico through Pan
ama, with paintings by David M. Dennis. Foreword by David B. Wake.
1180 p., 443 figures and maps, 94 plates (46 in color). Clothbound in 2
volumes $125.00. (Also: separate set of the 46 color plates, in protective
wrapper $45.00.)
Vol. 19. The Amphibians of Honduras, by James R. McCranie and Larry David
Wilson. 2002. Comprehensive summary of 116 species, including systemat
ics, natural history, and distribution. Foreword by Jay M. Savage. About 635
p., 126 figures, 33 tables, 154 color photographs of animals and habitats.
Clothbound $60.00.
Vol. 20. Islands and the Sea: Essays on the Herptological Exploration in the
West Indies, by Robert W. Henderson and Robert Powell (eds.). 2003. A col
lection of essays from 30 herpetologists on their experiences in the West
Indies. 312 p,, 316 photos, 14 maps. Clothbound $48.00
Vol. 21. Contributions to the history of Herpetology, Volume 2. by K. Adler, J.S.
Applegarth, and R. Altig. 2007. Biographies of 284 leading herpetologists,
index to 3512 authors in taxonomic herpetology, and academic lineages of
3810 herpetologists. 465 pp, 270 photographs, Clothbound. $ 65.00
Vol. 22. The Lives of Captive Reptiles, by Hans-Gnter Petzold. 2008. A
synthesis of information on captive and wild reptiles (and selected amphib
ians) covering physiology, behavior, and reproductive biology. 300 p., 63
photographs (57 in color), index. Clothbound $55.00.
Vol. 23. Biology of the Reptilia, vol. 20 (Morphology H), by Carl Gans, Abbot
S. Gaunt, and Kraig Adler (eds.). 2008. Chapters by three authors cover the
skull of the Lepidosauria (lizards, snakes, and tuatara). 769 p., 214 figures,
indices. Clothbound $70.00.
Vol. 24. Biology of the Reptilia, vol. 21 (Morphology I), by Carl Gans, Abbot
S. Gaunt, and Kraig Adler (eds.). 2008. Chapters by five authors cover the
skull and appendicular locomotor apparatus of the Lepidosauria (lizards,
snakes, tuatara, and amphisbaenians). 791 p., 151 figures, indices. Cloth
bound $70.00.
Vol. 25. Biology of the Reptilia, vol. 22 (Comprehensive Literature of the Reptilia),
by Carl Gans and Kraig Adler (eds.), and Ernest A. Liner (comp.). 2010.
Bibliography of 22,652 references with cross-referenced subject index.
Foreword by Harry W. Greene. 1386 p. Clothbound $130.00.
Vol. 26. The Snakes of Honduras: Systematics, Distribution, and Conservation,
by James R. McCranie. 2011. Comprehensive summary of 136 species,
including systematics, natural history, distribution, and conservation. Fore
word by Jay M. Savage. 724 p., 65 figures, 23 tables, 180 color photographs
of animals and habitats. Clothbound $95.00.
Vol. 27. Herpetofauna of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, by Marine S.
Arakelyan, Felix D. Danielyan, Claudia Corti, Roberto Sindaco, and Alan E.
Leviton. 2011. Summary of systematics, natural history,distribution, and
conservation of 59 species in 17 families. 186 p., 72 figures, 4 tables, 60
color maps, 151 color photographs of animals and habitats, index.
Clothbound $40.00.
Vol. 28. A Contribution to the Herpetology of Northern Pakistan, by Rafaqat
Masroor. 2012. Handbook to the amphibians and reptiles of Margalla Hills
National Park and surrounding region. Including color-illustrated keys, 109
color photographs of animals and habitats, color distribution maps for each
species, bibliography, checklist of amphibians and reptiles of Pakistan,
index. 217 p. Clothbound $45.00.
Vol. 29. Contributions to the History of Herpetology, volume 3, by Kraig Adler,
John S. Applegarth, and Ronald Altig. 2012. Biographies of leading herpe
tologists (with portraits and signatures), index to 5,290 authors in taxonomic
herpetology, and academic lineages of 5,562 herpetologists. Worldwide
coverage. color frontispiece. Clothbound $75.00.
HERPETOLOGICAL CIRCULARS
Miscellaneous publications of general interest to the herpetological community. All numbers are paperbound, as issued. Prepublication discount to Society
members.
No. 27. Lineages and Histories of Zoo Herpetologists in the United States, by
Winston Card and James B. Murphy. 2000. 49 p., 53 photographs. $8.00.
No. 28. State and Provincial Amphibian and Reptile Publications for the United
States and Canada, by John J. Moriarty and Aaron M. Bauer. 2000. 56 p.
$9.00.
No. 29. Scientific and Standard English Names of Amphibians and Reptiles of
North America North of Mexico, with Comments Regarding Confidence
in Our Understanding, by the Committee on Standard English and Scientific
Names (Brian I. Crother, chair). 2000 [2001]. 86 p. $11.00.
No. 30. Amphibian Monitoring in Latin America: a Protocol Manual/Monitoreo
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K. Reaser, Bruce E. Young, and Roberto Ibez. 2001 121 p. $13.00
No. 31. Herpetological Collecting and Collections Management. (Revised ed.)
by John E. Simmons. 2002. 159 p. $16.00
No. 32. Conservation Guide to the Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake Crotalus
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No. 33. Chameleons: Johann von Fischer and Other Perspectives. by James B.
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No. 34. Synopsis of Helminths Endoparasitic in Snakes of the United States and
Canada. by Carl h. and Evelyn M. Ernst. 2006. 86 p. $9.00.
No. 35. A Review of Marking and Individual Recognition Techniques for
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1958 to 2007. by John J. Moriarty and Breck Bartholomew. 2007. 60 p.
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DAmrique du Nord au Nord du Mexique / Standard French Names of
Amphibians and Reptiles of North America North of Mexico. David Green
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Volumes 34-39 (2000-2005), four numbers in each volume, $9.00 per single
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