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Helicops acangussu MORAES-DA-SILVA, WALTERMAN, CITELI, SALES-NUNES & CURCIO, 2022

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Higher TaxaColubridae (Dipsadinae), Colubroidea, Caenophidia, Alethinophidia, Serpentes, Squamata (snakes)
Subspecies 
Common Names 
SynonymHelicops acangussu MORAES-DA-SILVA, WALTERMAN, CITELI, SALES-NUNES & CURCIO 2022 
DistributionBrazil (Rondonia)

Type locality: Brazil, Rondonia, Porto Velho municipality, left bank of the upper Madeira River (9°2'56.03"S, 64°18'17.70"W), 86 m elevation.  
Reproductionoviparous 
TypesHolotype: UFRO-R 2748, adult female, unknown collector, on 23 September 2009; Paratypes (n = 27): MPEG, UFRO-R 
DiagnosisDiagnosis: “Helicops acangussu sp. nov. differs from all congeners by the following unique combination of characters: (1) dorsals 19–21/19/17–18 with moderate dorsal keels throughout the whole body length; (2) ventrals 121–129 (121–128 in males, 124–129 in females); (3) subcaudals 40–67 (52–67 in males, 40–43 in females); (4) subcaudal keels absent; (5) supralabials 8/8, 4th with orbit; (6) infralabials 10/10; (7) intergenials separating the 2nd pair of genials; (8) nasal semidivided; (9) one preocular; (10) two postoculars; (11) maxillary teeth 16–18 + 2; (12) hemipenis semicapitated, lobes asymmetrical (one of the lobes distinctly longer its counterpart), with medium-sized spines dispersed on lateral surface of body; (13) snout exhibiting a triangular light spot (light tan in life) usually covering the rostral, internasals, prefrontals, and anterior borders of frontal and supraoculars; (14) dorsum greenish grey, with five rows of black rounded spots, smaller on flanks and increasing in size towards vertebral level; (15) 35–47 dorsal spots on trunk (35–47 in males, 36–42 in females), and 10–23 dorsal spots on tail (13–23 in males, 10–15 in females); (16) venter background yellowish cream, checkered with asymmetrical black squared blotches, mostly divided at midline with their halves alternately displaced in opposite directions, and (17) 37–52 black bands on venter (37–52 in males, 38–44 in females), and 10–20 black bands on tail (13–20 in males, 10–14 in females).” (Moraes-da-Silva et al. 2022). 
CommentSimilar species: Helicops hagmanni, H. leopardinus, and H. polylepis. 
EtymologyThe specific epithet is a noun in apposition derived from the Tupi-Guarani (akãgu’su; a’kãga meaning “head”, u’su meaning “large”), a vernacular designation to the Jaguar [Panthera onca (Linnaeus, 1758)], a spotted South American big cat. Herein, it represents an allusion to the spotted pattern of the new species, as well as to the aggressive behaviour of most Helicops species that promptly bite when disturbed. 
References
  • Moraes-da-Silva, Antonio, Suellen Walterman, Nathalie Citeli, Pedro M S Nunes, and Felipe Franco Curcio. 2022. A New Oviparous Species of Helicops Wagler, 1828 (Serpentes, Xenodontinae) from Brazilian Amazonia with Reflections on the Evolution of Viviparity among Hydropsine Watersnakes. Zoologischer Anzeiger 296: 91–109 - get paper here
 
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