Simoselaps, or Australian coral snakes, is a genus composed of 12 species of venomous elapid snakes.

Simoselaps
Simoselaps fasciolatus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Elapidae
Subfamily: Hydrophiinae
Genus: Simoselaps
Jan, 1859

Geographic range edit

Species of the genus Simoselaps are found throughout Australia.

Description edit

Australian coral snakes are small snakes. They have smooth and polished scales, shovel-shaped snouts, and are brightly marked with bands or annuli.

Habitat and behavior edit

Species of Simoselaps are found mainly in arid regions. They are burrowing snakes which move beneath the surface through loose sand or soil. At night they come to the surface to feed on small lizards and reptile eggs.

Reproduction edit

All species of Australian coral snakes are oviparous and lay clutches of three to five eggs.

 
Simoselaps fasciolatus

Species edit

Species Authority Subsp. Common name Geographic range
S. anomalus (Sternfeld, 1919) None northern desert banded snake Australia (Northern Territory, South and Western Australia)
S. approximans (Glauert, 1954) None north-western shovel-nosed snake Western Australia
S. australis (Krefft, 1864) None Australian coral snake South Australia, New South Wales, Queensland and Victoria
S. bertholdi (Jan, 1864) None desert banded snake Australia
S. calonotus (A.M.C. Duméril, Bibron & A.H.A. Duméril, 1854) None black-striped burrowing snake Western Australia
S. fasciolatus (Günther, 1872) 2 narrow-banded shovel-nosed snake South and Western Australia, New South Wales, Northern Territory and Queensland
S. incinctus (Storr, 1968) None unbanded shovel-nosed snake Australia: Northern Territory and Queensland
S. littoralis (Storr, 1968) None west-coast banded snake Western Australia
S. minimus (Worrell, 1960) None Dampierland burrowing snake Western Australia
S. morrisi Horner, 1998 None Arnhem shovel-nosed snake[1] Australia:Northern Territory
S. roperi (Kinghorn, 1931) None northern shovel-nosed snake Western Australia, Kimberley Region and Northern Territory
S. semifasciatus (Günther, 1863) 3 southern shovel-nosed snake, half-girdled snake Western Australia, Northern Territory, South Australia and Queensland

Several of the above species are sometimes placed in the genera Brachyurophis or Neelaps.

References edit

  1. ^ Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. (Simoselaps morrisi, p. 183).

Further reading edit

  • Cogger HG (2000). Reptiles and Amphibians of Australia, Sixth Edition. Sanibel Island, Florida: Ralph Curtis Publishing. 808 pp.
  • Horner P (1998). "Simoselaps morrisi sp. nov. (Elapidae), a new species of snake of the Northern Territory". The Beagle 14: 63–70.
  • Jan [G] (1859). "Plan d'une Iconographie descriptive des Ophidiens et Description sommaire de nouvelles espèces de Serpents ". Revue et Magasin de Zoologie Pure et Apliquée, Paris, Series 2, 11: 122–130. (Simoselaps, new subgenus, p. 123). (in French).
  • Storr GM (1978). "Taxonomic notes on the reptiles of the Shark Bay region, Western Australia". Records of the Western Australian Museum 6 (3): 303–318.

External links edit