Mehelya
Mehelya | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Suborder: | Serpentes |
Family: | Lamprophiidae |
Genus: | Mehelya Csíki, 1903[1] |
Species | |
5 species, see article. |
Mehelya is a genus name of colubrid snakes from Africa. Some species formerly assigned to the genus Mehelya are now found in the genera Gonionotophis, Gracililima, or Limaformosa. They are collectively called file snakes due to their unusual scalation. They are not venomous.
Etymology
The generic name, Mehelya, is in honor of Hungarian zoologist Lajos Méhelÿ.
Species
The 5 species within the genus Mehelya are:
- Mehelya egbensis Dunger, 1966 (Dunger, 1966) – Dunger's file snake
- Mehelya gabouensis J.-F. Trape & Mané, 2005 (J.-F. Trape & Mané, 2005) – Gabou file snake
- Mehelya laurenti de Witte, 1959 (de Witte, 1959) – file snake
- Mehelya poensis (A. Smith, 1849) (A. Smith, 1849) – forest file snake, western forest file snake
- Mehelya stenopthalmus (Mocquard, 1887) (Mocquard, 1887) – small-eyed file snake
Geographic range
File snakes are found throughout much of sub-Saharan Africa, from the Cape of South Africa through Zimbabwe and Botswana to the Democratic Republic of the Congo and further.
Description
File snakes are not large snakes, growing to around 3–4 ft (90–120 cm). Their dorsal scales are most peculiar. Large patches of bare skin are seen, and scales are separated by large gaps. These scales are strongly keeled, giving the snake the feel of a file - hence the common name. Their body shape is triangular in cross section, which has been noted amongst other "cannibalistic" snakes, and may also provide some sort of benefit for them within their burrowing lifestyle.
Habitat
File snakes generally occupy more humid regions, but are found in hotter desert areas, too.
Behaviour
File snakes are, by nature, burrowers. They will occupy old, abandoned burrows of rodents where they shelter from the heat in the relative coolness underground. They are also adept at burrowing for themselves, their flattened head aiding them to push their way through the earth and leaf litter. This genus is nocturnal, becoming active at night to hunt prey – other reptiles.
Diet
The genus Mehelya feeds mainly on snakes and small lizards, such as geckos. Like many genera that feed solely on snakes, it has developed a triangular body shape as opposed to the plump, rounded body of other snakes.
References
- ^ Kelly, C.M.R., et al. (2010). "Molecular systematics of the African snake family Lamprophiidae Fitzinger, 1843 (Serpentes: Elapoidea), with particular focus on the genera Lamprophis Fitzinger 1843 and Mehelya Csiki 1903". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evololution 58 (3): 415-426.