Report of Nagarjunasagar Racer Coluber bholanathi Sharma, 1976 (Squamata: Serpentes: Colubridae) from the GingeeHills, Tamil Nadu, India
Utpal Smart 1, Eric N. Smith 2, B.H.C.K. Murthy 3& Arun Mohanty 4
1,2 Amphibian and Reptile Diversity Research Center, Department of Biology, University of Texas at
Arlington, Texas 76019-0498, USA
3 Zoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan,
M-Block, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal 700053,
India
4 Sri Aurobindo Ashram,
Pondicherry 605002, India
1 usmart@uta.edu (corresponding author), 2e.smith@uta.edu, 3 drbhckmurthy31@rediffmail.com, 4 arun.mohanty@gmail.com
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/JoTT.o3628.5671-4 | ZooBank: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D9DFC535-B245-4B3A-BFB9-483970D4A11C
Editor: Raju Vyas, Vadodara, Gujarat, India. Date
of publication: 26 April 2014 (online & print)
Manuscript details: Ms #
o3628 | Received 15 May 2013 | Final received 17 April 2014 | Finally accepted
18 April 2014
Citation: Smart, U., E.N. Smith, B.H.C.K.
Murthy & A. Mohanty (2014). Report of Nagarjunasagar Racer Coluber bholanathi Sharma, 1976 (Squamata:Serpentes: Colubridae) from
the Gingee Hills, Tamil Nadu, India. Journal
of Threatened Taxa 6(4): 5671–5674; http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/JoTT.o3628.5671-4
Copyright: © Smart et al. 2014. Creative
Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. JoTTallows unrestricted use of this article in any medium, reproduction and
distribution by providing adequate credit to the authors and the source of
publication.
Funding: None.
Competing Interest: The
authors declare no competing interests.
Acknowledgements: We would like to
thank the director of the Zoological Survey of India for allowing us to examine
the holotype and paratypesof C. bholanathi. We would also like to thank
Coleman M. Sheehy III for his valuable inputs to the manuscript. Vivek Sharma and Pratik Pradhanare thanked for their prompt and informative correspondence, and Paul P. Pasichnyk is thanked for his help with editing the images.
For
images, table -- click here
The NagarjunasagarRacer (or Sharma’s Racer) Coluber bholanathi Sharma, 1976 was described based on three
specimens (one male holotype ZSI 21337 and two femaleparatypes ZSI 21335, ZSI 21336) which were collected
from Nagarjuna Hills (16°31’N; 79°14’E; 105m) in
Guntur District, Andhra Pradesh State, India (Sharma 1976, 2003; Gupta et al.
2012; Ganesh et al. 2013; Seetharamaraju & Srinivasulu 2013). Sharma (1976, 2003) states that this
species is diurnal and found in rocky habitats covered in a mix of evergreen
and deciduous xerophytic vegetation. Judging from his
dissection of the female specimen, Sharma (1976) remarked that this species
preys upon gecko (Hemidactylus brookii). The climate of the type locality is described
as hot and dry from March to October, with rainfall during the south-west, and north-east monsoons between November and
February (Sharma 1976).
After several decades of obscurity, this
species was recently reported from the SeshachalamHills in southern Andhra Pradesh (Gupta et al. 2012), Golconda Fort Complex in
Hyderabad City, Devarakonda in NalgondaDistrict, both situated in central Andhra Pradesh (Ganesh et al. 2013; Seetharamaraju & Srinivasulu2013) and Thally in KrishnagiriDistrict, northern Tamil Nadu (Ganesh et al. 2013). In addition to reporting
new localities for Coluber bholanathi, Gupta et al. (2012) provided the first
in-life illustration of this species, Seetharamaraju& Srinivasulu (2013) elaborated on the hemipineal morphology of the species as described by Sharma
(2003) and Ganesh et al. (2013) provided the first illustration of the holotype while clearing up some confusion about its type
registration number. Cumulatively, these three works have shed some light on
this poorly-understood species.
In this note we provide the first report
of Coluber bholanathifrom the Gingee Hills, VillupuramDistrict, northeastern Tamil Nadu. The snake which
was ~40cm long (Image 2), was photographed by A. Mohantyon the morning of 6 December 2004 on a rocky hillock (12°06’16’’N, 79°22’46’’E;
115m) overlooking the Panamalai Lake (Image 1; Table
1). This lake is one of the many reservoirs that are scattered along the scenicGingee Hills that run parallel to the east coast of
Tamil Nadu. The Gingee Hills, which are a discontinuous
southern extension of the Eastern Ghats, are a mixture of dry deciduous scrub
forest and thorn scrub (Ramamurthy 1962; Champion & Seth 1968).
The snake was observed and photographed at
a distance of ~50m away before it escaped into a series of boulders. We used
the photograph provided in this note (Image 2) and three more, which provided
several different angles of the animal, to identify the snake as Coluber cf. bholanathibased on color pattern and dorsal scale rows at one
head-length behind the head, at midbody, and at one
head-length anterior to the vent. Due to C. bholanathi’sclose resemblance to C. gracilis, we also
examined the type specimens of C. bholanathi. Coluber gracilis (Günther 1862) is another Indian species of Coluber, reported only from a few localities in the Satpura mountain ranges and northern Western Ghats from the
states of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan (Mahendra 1948; Ingle 2002; Sharma 2003; Whitaker &
Captain 2004; Vyas et al. 2011; Walmikiet al. 2012; Table 1). It’s found in similar habitat type as C. bholanathi, e.g., rocky habitats with sparse, low, and
thorny vegetation, although it is also reported to inhabit plains and open
fields (Ingle 2002).
After close examination of the
photographs, digital sharpening, and identifying the approximate midline of the
animal, we found that the dorsal scales of the observed specimen from Gingee Hills were in (no more than) 19:19:17 rows. This
count is closer to that observed in C. bholanathi(19:19:15 rows) than it is to C. gracilis(21:21:15 rows) (Sharma 1976). We observed additional differences in the
patterning of the nuchal, oval blotch; in C. gracilis,
the blotch appears to usually have an inverse V at its posterior margin (Image
3), whereas in C. bholanathi, the posterior
margin tends to be either round or it fuses with the subsequent blotch forming
a single large and elongate blotch (Image 5). The Gingeespecimen has a nuchal blotch that has a round posterior margin, as observed in
several specimens, including the type of C. bholanathi(Image 2). Moreover, C. bholanathi and the GingeeHills specimen both possess a dark brown parietal bar that is interrupted
laterally by light coloration at the post-temporal area adjacent to the
parietal scales. In C. gracilis, however, the
dark parietal bar widens towards the last two supralabials,
typically forming an inverted “Y” (Image 4).
Based on similarities in diagnostic
morphological characters (namely: dorsal scale counts, nuchal marking and color pattern) and the geographic proximity of verified
records (Gupta et al. 2012; Ganesh et al. 2013), we identified the Coluber from Gingee Hills
as C. bholanathi. Our new record extends the
known range of the species by 495km south of the type locality and 194km south-east of the southernmost locality (Ganesh et al.
2013). Our note also provides encouraging prospects that the geographic range
of this obscure and rare species is probably larger than documented and we
propose that the Gingee hills and adjacent suitable
habitat warrant a more thorough sampling.
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