135
Phyllomedusa - 11(2), December 2012
Phyllomedusa 11(2):135–154, 2012
© 2012 Departamento de Ciências Biológicas - ESALQ - USP
ISSN 1519-1397
Received 22 May 2012.
Accepted 10 December 2012.
Distributed December 2012.
Snakes of an urban-rural landscape in the central
Andes of Colombia: species composition,
distribution, and natural history
Julián Andrés Rojas-Morales
División de Historia Natural, Centro de Museos, Universidad de Caldas, Cra 23 # 58-65, A. A. 275, Manizales, Caldas,
Colombia. E-mail: julian.herpetologia@gmail.com.
Current address: Programa de Postgraduación en Ecología Tropical, Instituto de Ciencias Ambientales y Ecológicas (ICAE),
Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida, Venezuela.
Abstract
Snakes of an urban-rural landscape in the central Andes of Colombia: species
composition, distribution, and natural history. From 2005 to 2011, I studied the
composition, distribution and natural history of an Andean urban-rural snake assemblage
at the Cordillera Central of Colombia, based on three data sources: (1) examination of
specimens in the MHN-UC [Museo de Historia Natural, Universidad de Caldas], (2)
incidental encounters by author, and (3) collection of data by other researchers. Additionally,
I provide natural history notes for the species involved. A total of 14 species, including
two subspecies of snakes, belonging to 12 genera and four families, have been found in the
studied area (municipality of Manizales, Caldas). Taking into account this total, 10 had at
least one record in the urban area, 13 in the rural area and 14 in forested areas. Only
Liophis epinephelus bimaculatus was found exclusively in forest environment. Three
species (21.4%) are apparently endemic to the region, six species (42.8%) correspond to a
fauna representative of the Tropical–Andean range of South America, four species (28.5%)
are distributed from Central America to the tropical Andes, and only one species is widely
distributed in the whole continent. The snake assemblage in Manizales is mostly terrestrial,
and in general, the species tend to be more active in the rainy periods of the year (mainly
from October–December), and most of them may occasionally be found in urban areas,
mainly close to areas of vegetation such as crops and pastures.
Keywords: Andean snakes, assemblage, distribution, diversity, natural history.