Prosymna angolensis
Prosymna angolensis, commonly known as the Angolan shovel-snout snake, is a species in the family Prosymnidae native to southern Africa. Described in 1915, little is known about it other than its range and morphology.
Morphology
Prosymna angolensis has a gray or tan dorsal coloration with dark spots down the back and a white ventral coloration. Snout-vent length averages 209mm for males and 224 for females The usual midbody scale row pattern is 17-25-25, and the species averages 138 ventral scales for males and 148 for females. It has one postocular scale and one preocular that separates the single prefrontal from the eyes. Its skull has reduced kinesis due to many reduced bone elements such as a reduced palatine and reduced maxilla, though the premaxilla is elongated.Taxonomic history
The species was first described in 1915 by George Boulenger. Previously, specimens were referred to as Prosymna frontalis. In 2022, Conradie et al. used morphology and DNA to separate P. angolensis into three species:- two newly-described species:
- * Prosymna confusa, a coastal species restricted to dry habitats in southwestern Angola,
- * Prosymna lisima, an eastern species found in Kalahari sands in eastern Angola, western Zambia, and the Caprivi Strip of Namibia,
- and retaining P. angolensis for specimens collected in western Angola, northeastern Namibia, northern Botswana, and eastern Zimbabwe.