Gasparilla
Gazette, Boca Grande, Florida, 11/6/12 by William Dunson
I
was surprised to find that a colleague at the Chicago Field Museum of Natural
History named a mangrove snake for me recently.
Many
years ago I discovered a new type of salt gland in a mangrove snake, a
dog-faced water snake I collected in Palau of the island group Micronesia, and
(my wife) Margaret, and I published a paper on this in 1979.
Subsequently
this snake has been found to be a new and isolated island species dubbed Cerberus dunsoni.
"This
species is named in honor of William A. Dunson for his pioneering work in
osmoregulation in reptiles," read the etymology on the research find
published in Zootaxa, a peer-reviewed Magnolia Press scientific journal
for animal taxonomists.
Cerberus dunsoni can be distinguished from all
other members of the genus with 23 scales rows at midbody by its rounded,
juxtaposed, plate-like scales on the crown. These scales appear to be thickened
compared with the scales of other Cerberus species. The 9-inch upper labial is
horizontally divided.
These
characters, combined with large parietal scale fragments and its uniform black
venter, make this a distinctive species. The large, plate-like fragments of the
parietals may fuse with the temporal scales.
The
parietal scales in other Cerberus snakes are usually fragmented into small
scales similar to other scales on the crown.
Is
it an honor to have a snake named for you? I think so and am very pleased to
have my years of study of marine reptiles recognized in this way.
William
Dunson, Ph.d., professor emeritus of biology at Penn State University, splits
time between Southwest Florida and his farm in Galax, Va. He can be reached
at wdunson@comcast.net.
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