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1 June 2008 A New Long-Tailed Rattlesnake (Viperidae) From Guerrero, Mexico
Jonathan A. Campbell, Oscar Flores-Villela
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Abstract

A distinctive new species of rattlesnake is described from the western versant of the Sierra Madre del Sur of Guerrero, Mexico. This long-tailed rattlesnake cannot be confused with any other species of rattlesnake and is most similar to Crotalus stejnegeri and C. lannomi. The Guerrero species possesses a strikingly distinct color pattern and differs from all other rattlesnakes in aspects of lepidosis. Mexico continues to be the origin of newly discovered species that provide important insights into the evolution or ecology of particular groups. A few examples from recent decades include Exiliboa placata, a monotypic, relictual dwarf boa (Bogert, 1968), Rhadinophanes monticola, a monotypic, highland colubrid (Myers and Campbell, 1981), and Pseudoeurycea aquatica, the only aquatic bolitoglossine salamander (Wake and Campbell, 2001).

Jonathan A. Campbell and Oscar Flores-Villela "A New Long-Tailed Rattlesnake (Viperidae) From Guerrero, Mexico," Herpetologica 64(2), 246-257, (1 June 2008). https://doi.org/10.1655/07-054.1
Published: 1 June 2008
KEYWORDS
Crotalus ericsmithi
Guerrero
Long-tailed rattlesnakes
Mexico
new species
Reptilia
Serpentes
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