Bothriechis is a genus of pit vipers, commonly called palm vipers[2] or palm-pit vipers[3] found predominantly in Mexico and Central America, although the most common species, B. schlegelii, ranges as far south as Colombia and Peru.[4] All members are relatively slender and arboreal. The name Bothriechis is derived from the Greek words bothros and echis that mean "pit" and "viper" respectively.[3] Ten species and no subspecies are currently generally recognized.[5][6]

Bothriechis
Black-speckled palm-pitviper (Bothriechis nigroviridis)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Viperidae
Subfamily: Crotalinae
Genus: Bothriechis
W. Peters, 1859
Species

11 species (see text)

Synonyms
  • Bothriechis W. Peters, 1859
  • Teleuraspis Cope, 1860
  • Thamnocenchris Salvin, 1860
  • Thanatos Posada Arango, 1889
  • Thanatophis Posada Arango, 1889[1]

Description

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Species that belong to this genus typically reach lengths of 60–80 cm, while B. aurifer, B. bicolor and B. lateralis are known to grow to 1 m or more.[3]

General characteristics include a sharply defined canthus rostralis, an unelevated snout, a rostral scale that is not as high as it is broad, and a prehensile tail that accounts for at least 15% of the body length.[3]

The color pattern usually consists of a green ground color that may or may not include pale or dark markings. B. schlegelii is an exception to this rule.[3]

Geographic range

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Occurs in southern Mexico (southeastern Oaxaca and the northern highlands of Chiapas), through Central America to northern South America (Colombia, western Venezuela, Ecuador and northern Peru).[1]

Behavior

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As a general rule, species found above 1,500 meters altitude tend to be diurnal, while those found below 1,000 meters tend to be active at night. Those found between 1,000 and 1,500 meters may be active at any time of the day.[3]

Venom

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Bothriechis venom is primarily a haemotoxin which causes severe pain, swelling, bleb formation, bruising, and quite often necrosis. If untreated it can lead to loss of a limb, or even death. Each year several farmers and plantation workers are bitten by eyelash vipers, sometimes resulting in fatalities. Wyeth in the United States and Instituto Clodomiro Picado in Costa Rica both manufacture different polyvalent antivenins which can be used to treat eyelash viper envenomations.

Species

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There are 11 recognized species.[7]

Image Species[5] Taxon author[5] Common name[3] Geographic range[1]
  B. aurifer (Salvin, 1860) Yellow-blotched palm-pitviper Mexico, in the mountains of eastern Chiapas, in northern Guatemala. Occurs in cloud forest at 1200–2300 m altitude.
  B. bicolor (Boucourt, 1868) Guatemalan palm-pitviper The Pacific slope of southeastern Chiapas in Mexico, eastward to south-central Guatemala. Also known from several locations in Honduras, including the southern part of the Sierra del Merendón and Cerro Santa Bárbara. Occurs in cloud forests at 500–2000 m altitude.
  B. guifarroi Townsend, Medina-Flores,
Wilson, Jadin & Austin, 2013[8]
Guifarro's palm-pitviper Honduras at 1015–1450 m altitude. "Found in the western portion of Cordillera Nombre de Dios, Department of Atlantida, Honduras."[6]
  B. hussaini Arteaga et al. 2024[9] Hussain's eyelash pitviper
  B. khwargi Arteaga et al. 2024[9] Khwarg’s eyelash pitviper
  B. klebbai Arteaga et al. 2024[9] Klebba's eyelash pitviper
  B. lateralis W. Peters, 1862 Side-striped palm-pitviper The mountains of Costa Rica and western Panama, including the Cordillera de Tilarán, the Cordillera Central and the Cordillera de Talamanca to the provinces of Chiriquí Province and Veraguas. Occurs at 850–980 m altitude.
  B. marchi (Barbour & Loveridge, 1929) Honduran palm-pitviper The Atlantic versant of northwestern Honduras and eastern Guatemala. Occurs in mesic forest at elevations of 500–1500 m altitude.
  B. nigroadspersus Steindachner, 1870[9] Central American eyelash pitviper
  B. nigroviridisT W. Peters, 1859 Black-speckled palm-pitviper The mountains of Costa Rica and Panama. Also found in the cloud forests of the Cordillera Central and the Cordillera de Talamanca at 1150–2400 m altitude.
  B. nitidus Günther, 1859[9] Ecuadorian eyelash pitviper
  B. nubestris Doan, Mason, Castoe, Sasa, & Parkinson, 2016 Talamancan palm-pitviper Costa Rica. San Isidro de El General, Province of San José at approximately 3000 m altitude.
  B. rahimi Arteaga et al. 2024[9] Rahim's eyelash pitviper
  B. rasikusumorum Arteaga et al. 2024[9] Shah's eyelash pitviper
  B. rowleyi (Bogert, 1968) Mexican palm-pitviper Mexico in southeastern Oaxaca and northern Chiapas. Occurs in cloud forests at 1500–1830 m altitude.
  B. schlegelii (Berthold, 1846) Highland eyelash pitviper, Schlegel’s eyelash pitviper From southern Mexico (northern Chiapas), southeastward on the Atlantic slope and lowlands through Central America to northern South America in Colombia and Venezuela. Also found on the Pacific versant and lowlands in parts of Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. Occurs in mesic forest at elevations almost from sea level to 2640 m altitude.
  B. supraciliaris (Taylor, 1954) Blotched eyelash pitviper Only found in a mountainous area in southwestern Costa Rica. Occurs in lower montane wet forest and cloud forest at elevations from 800 m to 1,700 m.[10]
  B. thalassinus Campbell & E.N. Smith, 2000 Merendon palm-pitviper Guatemala, Honduras at 1370–1750 m altitude.
  B. torvus Posada Arango, 1889a[9] Birri eyelash pitviper

T type species[1]

Taxonomy

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A new species from Guatemala and Honduras, B. thalassinus, was described by Campbell & E.N. Smith (2000). Campbell & Lamar (2004) recognize this species, as well as a ninth addition to the genus: B. supraciliaris, which was first described by Taylor (1954) as a subspecies of B. schlegelii, and is found in southwestern Costa Rica.[3]

In 2024, a systematic revision of B. schlegelii through DNA-sequencing split it into an additional number of species: B. klebbai, B. rasikusumorum, B. khwargi, B. rahimi, and B. hussaini. At the same time names that were previously synonyms were revalidated: B. nigroadspersus (Steindachner, 1870), B. nitidus (Günther, 1859), and B. torvus (Posada Arango, 1889a). Due to the close relation between these species alongside B. supraciliaris, they are considered to be part of a B. schlegelii species complex, otherwise referred to as the "eyelash clade" within Bothriechis. These "eyelash vipers" form a monophyletic clade that is sister to the rest of the genus.[9]

B. guifarroi was discovered in 2010 and described by Townsend et al. in 2013, in a study that included the following suggested phylogenetic tree of the genus:[6]

 
Phylogeny (Arteaga et al. 2024)
Bothriechis

B. schlegelli (Ecuador)

B. supraciliaris

B. schlegelli (Costa Rica, Honduras, Nicaragua)

B. nigroviridis

B. lateralis

B. guifarroi

B. marchi (Honduras, Guatemala)

B. thalassinus

B. bicolor

B. aurifer

B. rowleyi

References

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  1. ^ a b c d McDiarmid RW, Campbell JA, Touré TA. 1999. Snake Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference, Volume 1. Washington, District of Columbia: Herpetologists' League. 511 pp. ISBN 1-893777-00-6 (series). ISBN 1-893777-01-4 (volume).
  2. ^ Mehrtens JM. 1987. Living Snakes of the World in Color. New York: Sterling Publishers. 480 pp. ISBN 0-8069-6460-X.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Campbell JA, Lamar WW. 2004. The Venomous Reptiles of the Western Hemisphere. Ithaca and London: Comstock Publishing Associates. 870 pp. 1500 plates. ISBN 0-8014-4141-2.
  4. ^ Lewis, Robert Alan (23 March 1998). Lewis' Dictionary of Toxicology. CRC Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-56670-223-2.
  5. ^ a b c "Taxonomic Information for Palm Pit Vipers (Bothriechis)". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  6. ^ a b c Townsend, Josiah; Medina-Flores, Melissa; Wilson, Larry [in French]; Jadin, Robert; Austin, James (2013). "A relict lineage and new species of green palm-pitviper (Squamata, Viperidae, Bothriechis) from the Chortís Highlands of Mesoamerica". ZooKeys (298): 77–105. Bibcode:2013ZooK..298...77T. doi:10.3897/zookeys.298.4834. PMC 3689108. PMID 23794885.
  7. ^ Bothriechis at the Reptarium.cz Reptile Database. Accessed 26 January 2022.
  8. ^ "Taxonomic Information for Bothriechis guifarroi ". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Arteaga, Alejandro; Pyron, R. Alexander; Batista, Abel; Vieira, Jose; Pelayo, Elson Meneses; Smith, Eric N.; Amorós, César L. Barrio; Koch, Claudia; Agne, Stefanie; Valencia, Jorge H.; Bustamante, Lucas; Harris, Kyle J. (2024-02-08). "Systematic revision of the Eyelash Palm-Pitviper Bothriechis schlegelii (Serpentes, Viperidae), with the description of five new species and revalidation of three". Evolutionary Systematics. 8: 15–64. doi:10.3897/evolsyst.8.114527. ISSN 2535-0730.
  10. ^ Solórzano, Alejandro; Gómez, Luis D.; Monge-Nájera, Julián; Crother, Brian I. (1998). "Redescription and validation of Bothriechis supraciliaris". Revista de Biología Tropical. 46 (2): 1001–1013.

Further reading

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  • Campbell JA, Smith EN. 2000. "A new species of arboreal pitviper from the Atlantic versant of northern Central America". Revista de Biología Tropical 48: 1001–1013.
  • Cope ED. 1860 (dated 1859). "Catalogue of the venomous serpents in the museum of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, with notes on the families, genera and species". Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 11: 332-347 [338].
  • Peters W. 1859. "Über die von Hrn. Dr. Hoffmann in Costa Rica gesammelten und an das Königl. Zoologische Museum gesandten Schlangen". Monatsberichte der Preussischen Akademie Wissenschaften zu Berlin 1859: 275-278 [278].
  • Posada Arango A. 1889. Anales de la Academia de Medicina de Medellin 2: 45-49 [47].
  • Posada Arango A. 1889. Bulletin de la Société Zoologique de France, Paris 14: 343-345 [343].
  • Salvin O. 1860. "On the reptiles of Guatemala". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1860: 451-461 [459].
  • Taylor EH. 1954. "Further studies on the serpents of Costa Rica". University of Kansas Science Bulletin 36 (11): 673–801.
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