Updated: Oct. 21, 2018, 9:44 p.m.
NEW
ORLEANS (AP) 10/21/18 — A Louisiana professor is in heady company,
honored by having one of three newly identified species of snakes from
the Galapagos Islands named after him.
“They
named one after Charles Darwin — that’s a no-brainer — and one after
the Greek god of fire, and one after me, of all people,” said Robert A.
Thomas , an environmental biologist and head of head of the Center for
Environmental Communication at Loyola University New Orleans.
The
snake in question, a handsome critter with lengthwise brown and creamy
yellow stripes, is called Pseudalsophis thomasi (sood-al-SO-fis
TOM-uhs-eye).
“I’ve got a picture of it taped up here in the office, and it makes me smile every time I look at it,” Thomas said.
He’s
been studying snakes since the 1970s and began studying those in the
Galapagos Islands in 1984. In 1997, he published an overview of
Galapagos snakes based on features such as scale counts, patterns and
other shapes and forms.
A
team of Brazilian and Ecuadorian biologists led by Dr. Hussam Zaher of
the Universidad de Sao Paolo used genetic analysis to restudy the snakes
and work out their evolutionary route through the chain of islands.
That study identified the three new species. In addition to
Pseudalsophis thomasi, they are Pseudalsophis hephaestus, for the island
chain’s volcanic origins; and Pseudalsophis darwini, for the scientist
whose theory of evolution grew out of a voyage through the Galapagos.
Their
findings were published online Aug. 22 by the journal Systematics and
Biodiversity, and on Sept. 3 in the Brazilian journal Pesquisa.
The
scientists invited Thomas to join the team five years ago. He shared
the information he had collected and got more from U.S. museums. Then
the others told him they wanted to name one of the new species after
him, to honor his work studying the islands’ snakes.
“I
had to drop off the paper. The rules are that you cannot be an author
on a paper where something is named after you,” Thomas said. “I thought
about it deeply and decided there are just some fun honors you shouldn’t
pass up in life. This is one of them.”
Thomas
said the species is mildly venomous but not dangerous to people — only
to lizards and other small animals. The one used for the species’ formal
description was 726 millimeters (about 28.6 inches) long and weighed
105 grams (3.7 ounces).
Thomas
said he has photos of the snake that he took in 1984, not knowing it
was a different species. They weren’t very good, he said, because the
snake was wriggling, but they did let him describe the belly scales and
back pattern.
“A
friend could have named a bacterium after me from Outer Slobovia and
that would have been a real honor. ... But this is a snake that I’ve
worked on, so it’s very meaningful to me,” he said. “I’m very honored.”
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