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Monophyly of elapid snakes (Serpentes: Elapidae). An assessment of the evidence
Authors:C. J. MCCARTHY
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, British Museum (Natural History), Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD
Abstract:The defining morphological characters of the family Elapidae are analysed in an attempt to evaluate whether the front-fanged, proteroglyphous, snakes constitute a natural (monophyletic) group or whether proteroglyphy is more likely to be a condition achieved independently by a number of higher snake lineages. The evidence relating to presumed elapids whose affinities have been questioned, namely a South African genus Homoroselaps and New World proteroglyphs (Micrurus and Micruroides) , is examined. It concluded that Homoroselaps is a genuinely equivocal case, the evidence for its inclusion in the Elapidae is balanced by features which suggest that it is more closely related to the Aparallactinae. However, Micrurus and Micruroides seem clearly to be more closely related to undisputed elapids than to any other caenophidians. It is suggested that, at least for the present, the family Elapidae be retained in its broad sense to include all proteroglyphous snakes.
Keywords:Elapidae    Elapinae    Hydrophiinae    Laticaudinae    phylogeny    dentition    myology    taxonomy
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