Python europaeus
Temporal range: Early Miocene–Middle Miocene
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Pythonidae
Genus: Python
Species:
P. europaeus
Binomial name
Python europaeus
Szyndlar & Rage, 2003

Python europaeus is an extinct python species. It lived during the early/middle Miocene. The holotype is a single trunk vertebra found in France.[1]

Discovery and naming

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Fossilized remains of Python europaeus were first reported in 1958 by French herpetologist Robert Hoffstetter, decades before the species was named, who published that python fossils had been found in the localities of Pontlevoy, La Grive-Saint-Alban and Mont Ceindre (now known as Vieux Collonges) in France.[2] The material from Vieux Collonges would be mentioned in later works published in during the 1970s and 1980s, which refer to the material as an unnamed species of Python.[3][4][5][6] In 2001, the Vieux Collonges material, consisting of over 300 vertebrae and a palatine bone, was illustrated and redescribed in detail by Martin Ivanov, though he believed the incompleteness of the skull made it impossible to identify this material to the species level, and identified it only as a member of the genus Python.[7]

In 2003, a study reanalysed the python fossils first reported by Hoffstetter and determined that they represent a new species, distinguished from others by its lower neural spines. This species was given the name Python europaeus, the specific name referring to Europe, the continent from which its remains originate. A single trunk vertebra from Vieux Collonges (MNHN, VCO 29) was designated as the holotype specimen of this species, with an additional 379 vertebrae and one palatine bone being referred to it. The referred material originates from Vieux Collonges and La Grive-Saint-Alban, however no python remains could be traced from Pontlevoy, leading the authors to suggest that the supposed python fossils from Pontlevoy reported by Hoffstetter are actually remains of Botrophis gaudryi.[8]

References

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  1. ^ Schleip W.; O'Shea M. (2010). "Annotated checklist of the recent and extinct pythons (Serpentes, Pythonidae), with notes on nomenclature, taxonomy, and distribution". ZooKeys (66): 29–79. Bibcode:2010ZooK...66...29S. doi:10.3897/zookeys.66.683. PMC 3088416. PMID 21594030.
  2. ^ Hoffstetter, Robert (1958). "Les Squamates (Sauriens et Serpents) du Miocène français". Compte Rendu du 83e Congrès des Sociétés savantes de Paris et des Départements. 83: 195–200.
  3. ^ R, Hoffstetter; J-C, Rage (1972). "Les Erycinae fossiles de france (Serpentes, Boidae) comprehension et histoire de la sous-famille". Annales de Paléontologie (Vertébrés). 58 (1): 81–129.
  4. ^ Thomas, H.; Sen, S.; Khan, M.; Battail, B.; Ligabue, G. (1982). "The Lower Miocene Fauna of Al-Sarrar (Eastern province, Saudi Arabia)". Atlal (Journal of Saudi Arabian Archaeology). 5: 109–136.
  5. ^ Demarcq, Gerard; Ballesio, Rolland; Rage, Jean-Claude; Guerin, Claude; Mein, Pierre; Meon, Henriette (1983-07-01). "Donnees paleoclimatiques du neogene de la Vallee du Rhone (France)". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 42 (3): 247–272. Bibcode:1983PPP....42..247D. doi:10.1016/0031-0182(83)90025-1. ISSN 0031-0182.
  6. ^ Seigel, Richard A.; Collins, Joseph T.; Novak, Susan S., eds. (1987). "Fossil history". Snakes: ecology and evolutionary biology. Caldwell, N.J: Blackburn Press. pp. 51–76. ISBN 978-1-930665-15-6.
  7. ^ Ivanov, Martin (2000). "Snakes of the lower/middle Miocene transition at Vieux Collonges (Rhône, France), with comments on the colonisation of western Europe by colubroids". Geodiversitas. 22 (4): 559–588. S2CID 126907224.
  8. ^ Szyndler, Zbigniew; Rage, Jean-Claude (2003). "Non-Erycine Booidea from the Oligocene and Miocene of Europe". Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Cracow: 1–109.


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List of invasive species in North America

Equus caballus (feral horse) Felis catus (domestic cat, feral) Lepus europaeus (European hare) Macaca mulatta (rhesus macaque) Mus musculus (house mouse)

C5orf34

birds and reptiles with the most distant ancestor being the Burmese python, Python bivittatus. The C5orf34 protein contains two mammalian conserved domains:

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throughout their range, except for in the Everglades, where the invasive Burmese python has reduced their numbers, and the lower Florida Keys, where the subspecies

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prey along with another introduced leporid, the European hare (Lepus europaeus). In almost every part of Australia, these eagles take rabbits in some

C11orf52

Oryctolagus cuniculus European Rabbit XP_002708495.1 126 75 83 Erinaceus europaeus European Hedgehog XP_007539796.1 124 59 69 Leptonychotes weddellii Weddell

List of sequenced animal genomes

Tree Python (2022) Python bivittatus, Burmese python (2013) Python regius, Ball python (2020[citation needed]) Simalia boeleni, Boelen's Python (2022)