ON THE STATUS OF Boiga ocellata KROON, 1973, WITH THE DESIGNATION OF A NEOTYPE FOR Boiga siamensis NOOTPAND, 1971 (SERPENTES, COLUBRIDAE)

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Russian Journal of Herpetology Vol. 12, No. 2, 2005, pp. 102 106 ON THE STATUS OF Boiga ocellata KROON, 1973, WITH THE DESIGNATION OF A NEOTYPE FOR Boiga siamensis NOOTPAND, 1971 (SERPENTES, COLUBRIDAE) Olivier S. G. Pauwels, 1 Patrick David, 2 Lawan Chanhome, 3 Gernot Vogel, 4 Tanya Chan-ard, 5 and Nikolai L. Orlov 6 Submitted February 15, 2005. The nominal species Boiga ocellata Kroon, 1973 is shown to be a junior synonym of Boiga siamensis Nootpand, 1971, an overlooked taxon, which has priority. The low number of citations of Boiga ocellata in the literature falls within the recommendations of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature to not threaten the Principle of Stability. The types of Boiga siamensis being lost, we designate the holotype of Boiga ocellata as neotype of Boiga siamensis. Keywords: Reptilia, Colubridae, Boiga ocellata, Boiga siamensis, synonymy, neotype, Thailand. In memory of the late Group Captain Wirot Nutphand (1932 2005), a pioneer in Thai herpetology. 1 Department of Recent Vertebrates, Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Rue Vautier 29, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium. E-mail: osgpauwels@yahoo.fr 2 Département Systématique et Evolution, USM 602 Taxonomie-collection Reptiles and Amphibiens, Case postale 30, Muséum National d Histoire Naturelle, 25 rue Cuvier, F-75231 Paris Cedex 05, France. E-mail: pdavid@mnhn.fr 3 Queen Saovabha Memorial Institute, Thai Red Cross Society, 1871 Rama IV Road, Bangkok 10330, Thailand. E-mail: Lawan.C@chula.ac.th 4 Society for Southeast Asian Herpetology, Im Sand 3, D-69115 Heidelberg, Germany. E-mail: Gernot.Vogel@t-online.de 5 National Science Museum, Technopolis, Klong 5, Klong Luang, Patumthani 12120, Thailand. E-mail: dhanya_ch@yahoo.com 6 Laboratory of Herpetology and Ornithology, Zoological Institute, Academy of Sciences, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia. Asian species of the genus Boiga morphologically related to Boiga cynodon are in need of revision (Orlov and Ryabov, 2002). In the frame of our systematic studies on the Thai members of this genus, we came across the description of an overlooked taxon, Boiga siamensis, described from Thailand by Nootpand (1971; Nootpand was an early transliteration for the author s name now better known as Nutphand) in a poorly distributed monograph on the venomous snakes of this country. Subsequently, Kroon (1973) described Boiga ocellata, also from Thailand. In the present paper, we compare both taxa on the basis of published descriptions and of preserved specimens. As the types of Boiga siamensis are definitely lost, we here select a neotype in order to fix the taxonomy and nomenclature of this taxon. Institutions abbreviations. CUMZ(R), Chulalongkorn University Museum of Zoology (Reptiles), Bangkok, Thailand; FMNH, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, USA; IRSNB, Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Brussels, Belgium; MNHN, Muséum National d Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France; PSGV, Gernot Vogel s private collection, Heidelberg, Germany; PWBS, Phang-Nga Wildlife Breeding Station, Phang-Nga, Thailand; QSMI, Queen Saovabha Memorial Institute, Thai Red Cross Society, Bangkok, Thailand; SERS, Sakaerat Environmental Research Station, Sakaerat, Thailand; THNHM, Thai Natural History Museum, National Science Museum, Pathumthani, Thailand. RESULTS Description of Boiga siamensis Nootpand, 1971 Nootpand (1971) described and depicted a species of Boiga under the combination Boiga cynodon siamensis (p. 60) or the binomen Boiga siamensis [pp. 61 (Table) and 64 (Figure)]. According to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN, 1999; cited below as the Code), Art. 24.2.2, we here act as First Re- 1026-2296 2005 1202-0102 2005 Folium Publishing Company

On the Status of Boiga ocellata and Boiga siamensis 103 Fig. 1. Photograph accompanying the original description of Boiga siamensis, published in Nootpand (1971: 65). Reproduced with the kind permission of W. Nutphand. visers in selecting Boiga siamensis as the original combination under which the nomen siamensis was published. On page 60, the diagnosis is short and more complete in the Thai text than in the English description. The English text only states that Boiga cynodon and Boiga cynodon siamensis have long front fang and have other teeth like fang at the lower jaw. The combined distribution for both taxa is given as southern and western Thailand in the English text, whereas only southern Thailand is mentioned in the Thai text. In the table of page 61, written in Thai, the description (presented verbatim) reads as follows, arranged according to the columns of the table: Common name: Ngoo sae hang ma thao (2nd col.) Boiga sp. siamensis (3rd col.) Body tail sizes: 1692 351 mm (4th col.) Colour: body gray, with black bands and white spots (5th col.) Time of feeding: night time (6th col.) Biotope: grassfields and on the trees (7th col.) Ngoo sae hang ma thao literally means the gray horse-tail whip snake. No type specimen was mentioned, but the picture of page 64 depicts two living specimens which we here consider to be the syntypes. These specimens are now definitely lost (W. Nutphand, personal communication to O. S. G. Pauwels, August 2000). From this picture, in spite of its average quality, it can be seen that these snakes, obviously of the genus Boiga, show an intricate mixture of light diffuse blotches inserted between dark dorsolateral blotches, dark blotches at mid-height of flanks and conspicuous white ocelli on the bottom half of the body, and the head marked with a very well defined black postocular streak. It is interesting to note that the description of Boiga cynodon appearing on page 61 of Nootpand (1971) is reported as very variable, but there is no mention of the white ocelli typical of Boiga siamensis. Comparison with Boiga ocellata Kroon, 1973 The short description of Boiga siamensis provided by Nootpand (1971) perfectly agrees with the current concept of Boiga ocellata: ratio tail length total length, color (to be compared with the original description of B. ocellata), nocturnal habits and biotope (see Pauwels et al., 2003). The very typical pattern of both B. siamensis syntype bodies leaves no doubt on the identity of

104 Olivier S. G. Pauwels et al. Fig. 2. Adult Boiga siamensis found at night in forest at Sakaerat Experimental Research Station (locality of the holotype of Boiga ocellata), Nakhon Ratchasima Province, Thailand. Photograph by L. Chanhome. snakes depicted on page 64 in Nootpand (1971). These specimens are identical, in pattern, with those referred two years later to as Boiga ocellata Kroon, 1973. We could not examine any specimen referred to Boiga siamensis by Nutphand himself, and we are not aware of any specimen deposited by him. However, since (1) this pattern is very peculiar, and thus there is no risk of confusion with any other species of the genus or any other snake of Thailand, and (2) no significant variation that could suggest the existence of more than one species has been shown in known specimens of Boiga ocellata, we regard Boiga ocellata Kroon, 1973 as a junior homonym of Boiga siamensis Nootpand, 1971. Moreover, Thumwipat and Nutphand (1982) provided a picture of what they called Boiga cynodon siamensis, which also clearly corresponds to the current concept of Boiga ocellata. They (loc. cit.: 114) provided a description of this taxon in Thai, the translation of which is presented hereafter: Similar to Boiga cynodon, but smaller. The body length is 1014 mm (head 28 mm, body 702 mm, tail 284 mm). Front teeth shorter than in B. cynodon. The general coloration of body is pale gray, with black or dark gray uncomplete bands. Black lateral lines on head. Found in western Thailand, e.g., in Kanchanaburi and Ratchaburi. To date the species was not yet characterized in details. It however differs from Boiga cynodon in size, coloration, teeth and some head scales (checked from many specimens). Therefore it is identified as a subspecies of Boiga cynodon. DISCUSSION The two syntypes of Boiga siamensis are lost. In order to fix the status of this binomen, and in agreement with Art. 75.3 of the Code, we here select the holotype of Boiga ocellata Kroon, 1973 (FMNH 191997, a male from Sakaerat, Nakhon Ratchasima Province, Thailand; collected by R. F. Inger, April 7, 1969) as the neotype of Boiga siamensis Nootpand, 1971. The type locality of this latter species hence becomes the locality of the holotype of B. ocellata. The neotype of B. siamensis was extensively described in Kroon (1973: 581 584), and this description will not be repeated here. It is not surprising that the description of Boiga siamensis, which appeared in a semi-popular book, furthermore mostly written in Thai, was largely overlooked. To our best knowledge, this binomen never appeared in the

On the Status of Boiga ocellata and Boiga siamensis 105 Western literature, even as a synonym of Boiga cynodon. In the Thai literature, besides Nootpand (1971), it was cited in Thumwipat and Nutphand (1982; as Boiga cynodon siamensis), Nutphand (1986; as B. siamensis), and Jintakune (1986; as B. siamensis). Nutphand (2001) used the specific nomen ocellata, as did Jintakune and Chanhome (1995), who however kept the common name ngoo sae hang ma thao. Resurrecting overlooked zoological binomens is often the subject of controversy, as it may threaten the Stability in favor of the Priority, which, it must be stressed again, is the real base of the Code (ICZN, 1999). According to Art. 23.9. 1.2 of the Code, in order to be retained as a valid name, a junior synonym should have been used as a presumed valid name in at least 25 works, published by at least 10 authors in the immediately preceding 50 years. Here, on the basis of this article, we consider that stability is not threatened, since, to our best knowledge, the combination Boiga ocellata was used less than 25 times in the literature (Kroon, 1973; Marx, 1976; Dowling and Jenner, 1988; Welch, 1988; Nabhitabhata, 1989, Coborn, 1991; Cox, 1991; Cox et al., 1998; Das, 1998; Chan-ard et al., 1999; Stuart, 1999; Thirakhupt, 2000; Nutphand, 2001; Iskandar and Colijn, 2002; Orlov and Ryabov, 2002; Orlov et al., 2003a, 2003b; Pauwels et al., 2003; David et al., 2004; Tillack et al., 2004; Whitaker and Captain, 2004). At the exception of Whitaker and Captain (2004), the specific epithet ocellata was seemingly overlooked in all Indian references which we consulted, including Das (1996), in which the species was identified as Boiga cynodon. The potential risk of threatening the stability being far from met, we consider that Boiga siamensis is a valid senior synonym of Boiga ocellata. Boiga siamensis is currently known from Bangladesh, Northeast India (westwards up to Bengal), Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam (Orlov and Ryabov, 2002; Stuart, 1999). In Thailand, it was recorded in the provinces of Chanthaburi, Chiang Mai, Chumphon (currently the southernmost known locality in the area of the Isthmus of Kra), Kanchanaburi, Loei, Nakhon Ratchasima, Phetchaburi, Ratchaburi, Sakon Nakhon, Tak, Trat, and Uthai Thani (Cox, 1991; Pauwels et al., 2003 [as Boiga ocellata]; material examined see Appendix). In Vietnam, it is known from Nam Cat Tien National Park in Lam Dong Province (Orlov et al., 2003b). In contrast, Boiga cynodon is a southern species, known in South Thailand as far north as the provinces of Phang-Nga (Pauwels et al., 2000) and Prachuap Khiri Khan on the Isthmus of Kra (Cox, 1991) and widespread in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. The most recent list of Boiga species (Orlov and Ryabov, 2002) and checklist of snakes of Thailand (David et al., 2004) should hence be modified in replacing Boiga ocellata Kroon, 1973 by Boiga siamensis Nootpand, 1971. Acknowledgments. We are grateful to Indraneil Das (University Malaysia Sarawak) for his valuable comments on the draft of this paper, and to Chucheep (Teak) Chimsunchart (Phetchaburi) for her assistance in translating Thai literature. Taksin Artchawakom (SERS, Sakaerat), Ong-Arj Laohawat (formerly PWBS, Phang-Nga), Georges Lenglet (IRSNB, Brussels), Jarujin Nabhitabhata (THNHM, Pathumthani), and Kumthorn Thirakhupt (CUMZ, Bangkok) kindly gave access to the collections in their care. The first author thanks Wirot Nutphand (Pata Zoo, Bangkok) for useful information. REFERENCES Chan-ard T., Grossmann W., Gumprecht A. and Schulz K.-D. (1999), Amphibians and Reptiles of Peninsular Malaysia and Thailand. An Illustrated Checklist [Amphibien und Reptilien der Halbinsel Malaysia und Thailands. Eine illustrierte Checkliste], Bushmaster Publ., Würselen. Coborn J. (1991), The Atlas of Snakes of the World, T.F.H. Publ. Co., Neptune, NJ. Cox M. J. (1991), The Snakes of Thailand and Their Husbandry, Cox M. J., van Dijk P. P., Nabhitabhata J., and Thirakhupt K. (1998), A Photographic Guide to Snakes and Other Reptiles of Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand, New Holland Publishers, London Cape Town Sydney Singapore. Das I. (1996), Biogeography of the Reptiles of South Asia, Das I. (1998), A new species of Boiga (Serpentes: Colubridae) from the Nicobar Archipelago, J. South Asian Nat. Hist., 3(1), 59 67. David P., Cox M. J., Pauwels O. S. G., Chanhome L., and Thirakhupt K. (2004), When a book review is not sufficient to say all: an in-depth analysis of a recent book on the snakes of Thailand, with an updated checklist of the snakes of the Kingdom, Nat. Hist. J. Chulalongkorn Univ. Bangkok, 4(1), 47 80. Dowling H. G. and Jenner J. V. (1988), Snakes of Burma. Checklist of reported species and bibliography, Smithsonian Herpetol. Inf. Serv., 76, 1 19. ICZN (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature) (1999), International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. Fourth Edition Adopted by the International Union of Biological Sciences, The International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature, London. Iskandar D. T. and Colijn E. (2002), Checklist of Southeast Asian and New Guinean Reptiles. Part 1. Serpentes, Binamitra, Jakarta.

106 Olivier S. G. Pauwels et al. Jintakune P. (1986), Banchee rai chu ngoo nai Prathet Thai [List of the Names of Snakes from Thailand ], Science Division, Thai Red Cross Society, Bangkok Jintakune P. and Chanhome L. (1995), Ngoo phit nai Prathet Thai [The Venomous Snakes of Thailand], Queen Saovabha Memorial Institute, Thai Red Cross Society, Bangkok Kroon C. (1973), A new colubrid snake (Boiga) from Southeastern Asia, Copeia, 1973(3), 580 586. Marx H. (1976), Supplementary catalogue of type specimens of reptiles and amphibians in Field Museum of Natural History, Fieldiana Zool., 69(2), 33 94. Nabhitabhata J. (1989), Species diversity of Thai herpetofauna, in: Biodiversity in Thailand. Biol. Sci. Seminar 7, Chiang Mai Univ. and Sci. Soc. of Thailand, Bangkok, pp. 169 204 [in Thai with English abstract]. Nootpand W. (1971), Poisonous Snakes of Thailand, Thai Zoological Centre, Bangkok. Nutphand W. (1986), Ngoo kheeo dong lai. Karnphisoot sap chanit mai [Banded green cat snake. New species identification], Thai Zool. Center Bangkok, 1(1), 1 10 [in Thai]. Nutphand W. (2001), A Sketch of the Snakes in Thailand, Amarin Printing and Publishing Public Co. Ltd., Bangkok Orlov N. L. and Ryabov S. A. (2002), A new species of the genus Boiga (Serpentes, Colubridae, Colubrinae) from Tanahjampea Island and description of black form of Boiga cynodon complex from Sumatra (Indonesia), Russ. J. Herpetol., 9(1), 33 56. Orlov N. L., Kudryavtzev S. V., Ryabov S. A., and Shumakov O. V. (2003a), A new species of genus Boiga (Serpentes: Colubridae: Colubrinae) and color atlas of boigas from Bengkulu Province (Sumatra, Indonesia), Russ. J. Herpetol., 10(1), 33 52. Orlov N. L., Ryabov S. A., Nguyen V. S., and Nguyen Q. T. (2003b), New records and data on the poorly known snakes of Vietnam. Russ. J. Herpetol., 10(3), 217 240. Pauwels O. S. G., Laohawat O.-A., David P., Bour R., Dangsee P., Puangjit C., and Chimsunchart C. (2000), Herpetological investigations in Phang-Nga Province, southern Peninsular Thailand, with a list of reptile species and notes on their biology, Dumerilia, 4(2), 123 154. Pauwels O. S. G., David P., Chimsunchart C., and Thirakhupt K. (2003), Reptiles of Phetchaburi Province, Western Thailand: a list of species, with natural history notes, and a discussion on the biogeography at the Isthmus of Kra, Nat. Hist. J. Chulalongkorn Univ. Bangkok, 3(1), 23 53. Stuart B. L. (1999), Amphibians and reptiles, in: J. W. Duckworth, R. E. Salter and K. Khounboline (comp.), Wildlife in Lao PDR: 1999 Status Report, IUCN-The World Conservation Union Wildlife Conservation Society Centre for Protected Areas and Watershed Management, Vientiane, pp. 43 67. Thirakhupt K. (2000), Amphibians and Reptiles, in: Review of Biodiversity Research in Thailand. Biodiversity Research and Training Program, Bangkok, pp. 149 171 Thumwipat B. and Nutphand W. (1982), Treatment of Patients Bitten by Venomous Snakes and Venomous Snakes of Thailand, Thai Zoological Centre, Bangkok Tillack F., Ziegler T., and Quet L. K. (2004), Eine neue Art der Gattung Boiga Fitzinger, 1826 (Serpentes: Colubridae: Colubrinae) aus dem zentralen Vietnam, Sauria, 26(4), 3 12. Welch K. R. G. (1988), Snakes of the Orient. A Checklist, Whitaker R. and Captain A. (2004), Snakes of India. The Field Guide, Draco Books, Chennai (Madras). APPENDIX. Thai Specimens Examined Boiga cynodon (30 specimens). MNHN 1998.0596, PWBS 205, Phang-Nga Wildlife Breeding Station, Muang District, Phang-Nga Province; PSGV 24, PSGV 35 (1 embryo), PSGV 37 (3 embryos), PSGV 450, PSGV 467 (3 juveniles), PSGV 468, PSGV 531, PSGV 601 (2 specimens), PSGV 602, PSGV 646 (2 specimens), PSGV 699, no exact locality; PSGV 43, PSGV 47, Thung Song, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province; QSMI 149 153, QSMI 245 246, QSMI 371, QSMI 410, no exact locality. Boiga siamensis (6 specimens). CUMZ(R) 1998.12.11.19, Ban Kha Non, Ban Lat District, Phetchaburi Province; IRSNB 15084, Ban Bang Thalu, Muang District, Phetchaburi Province; IRSNB 15584, 25 km NW of Lan-Sak, 65 km NW of Uthai Thani, Uthai Thani Province, el. 110 m; PSGV 368, Sakon Nakhon Province; SERS (unnumbered), Sakaerat Experimental Research Station, Nakhon Ratchasima Province; THNHM 4423, Phriew Waterfall National Park (formerly Khao Sabab National Park), Khlung District, Chanthaburi Province.