© 2004-2021 Thomas Jäkel
Geographic Variability
Previously, various geographically isolated
populations in SE Asia were all subsumed under
the single species, Tropidolaemus wagleri. Genetic
evidence suggests, however, that the populations
from peninsular Malaysia/Sumatra represent a
different species compared to those from Borneo
and Sulawesi (see taxonomy section). Therefore,
Wagler’s vipers from Borneo and Sulawesi have
been designated as T. subannulatus. Also with
regard to phenotype, the two species show striking
differences. This is what this chapter is about, see
the images below.
The genetic status of Philippine populations has
not been determined yet. However, a new species,
Tropidolaemus philippensis, has been decribed
and other populations from northern as well as
southern Philippines have been designated as T.
subannulatus. Given the existence of thousands of
islands in Southeast Asia, evolution of different
species seems all too likely.
I have tested the possibility to cross the Bornean
with the Western Malaysian form, using a
Borneo-male and Penang-female. Mating led to
fertilized eggs and development of embryos.
However, these died in an immature stage and
were discharged by the female. I observed this two
times, after two consecutive matings. Hence, there
may exist a reproductive barrier between
populations from Borneo and Western Malaysia.
This is in line with the molecular data, but would
require further investigation.
Note that juvenile and adult males of different
geographic origin are very similar (usually green
or blueish green; no ontogenetic variation) in
comparison to females, which undergo a
significant change in body coloration from green as
juveniles to a variety of colorations in adulthood
(see 'How Females Change'). Adult males are much
smaller than females, reaching only about 40-60
cm in comparison to the 70-100 cm of females.
Fully-grown males from Western Malaysia and
Sumatra usually exhibit characteristic red-white
spots on the back, whereas adult Bornean males
tend to show only white markings (however, they
start with red-white as juveniles). Males from
Sulawesi may show blue-white or red-white spots.
Northern Philippine populations are unique as
adult females also retain the juvenile pattern which
is reflected in red-white bands contrasting with a
fresh green.
There is considerable confusion concerning
animals from Borneo, Sulawesi and the Philippines,
especially when they are juvenile. For instance,
traders sometimes confuse Northern Philippine
vipers with specimens from Sulawesi. Blue-banded
juveniles from Borneo appear quite similar to
specimens from Sulawesi, where adult females
usually show a more or less prominent blue
banding pattern. Please, check the 'Images' section
to get a better idea of geographical variation.
Distribution in the
Philippines
Stunning images from blue and orange specimens
from the Southern Philippines (Mindanao, Negros
etc.) have been published recently, including new
species designations (Vogel 2006). The Philippines
are certainly a hot spot in Wagleri evolution.
However, a thorough scientific revision of the
Wagleri-complex has not been published yet, and
further genetic analysis is overdue.
Leviton (1964) reported T. wagleri to occur on
Luzon, Negros, Samar, Leyte, Mindanao, Basilan,
Jolo, Palawan and Balabac. The map below depicts
some collection sites in the Philippines for T.
wagleri (currently T. subannulatus) deposited in the
California Academy of Sciences Collection. This
collection was made between the years 1908 and
1961, whereby the majority of specimen were
found on Negros, Mindanao and Palawan.
Tropidolaemus philippensis (Gray, 1842) is
currently known only from southern and western
parts of the island of Mindanao.