Pier Cacciali
Rafael Advanced Defense Systems
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pier Cacciali.
Pap�is Avulsos de Zoologia (S�o Paulo) | 2006
Norman J. Scott; Alejandro R. Giraudo; Gustavo Scrocchi; Aída Luz Aquino; Pier Cacciali; Martha Motte
Snakes of the pseudoboine genera Clelia, which is probably polyphyletic, and Boiruna are distributed from southern Argentina, southern Brazil, and Uruguay northwards into central Mexico. Six members occur in Paraguay and Argentina: B. maculata, Clelia bicolor, C. clelia, C. plumbea, C. quimi, and C. rustica. Historically, there has been taxonomic confusion among the larger species (B. maculata, C. clelia, C. plumbea, and C. rustica) and between the small species (C. bicolor and C. quimi). All of the species except C. rustica have distinct ontogenetic color changes. Species can be distinguished on the bases of size, color, hemipenial spines, and loreal, supralabial, and ventral scale counts. Much of the morphological evolutionary differentiation in Boiruna and Clelia seems to have taken place in the snout region, as evidenced by the differing proportions of the scales of the loreal region. Boiruna maculata has the widest ecological amplitude. It is broadly distributed in most vegetation types north of the 38th parallel in central Argentina, being absent only from the deltaic sediments of Buenos Aires Province, Argentina and the broad valleys and rolling hills of eastern Paraguay. Clelia bicolor is most common in the Paraguay and Parana river valleys, with a few records from the Andean foothills in northern Argentina. Clelia clelia is distributed along the Rio Paraguay and the lower Parana, and is also found throughout much of eastern Paraguay. Clelia plumbea is apparently parapatric with C. clelia along the Rio Parana in southeastern Paraguay and Misiones Province, Argentina. The ranges of C. quimi to the east and C. bicolor in the west about in this same region without apparent overlap. There are no vouchered records of Clelia rustica from Paraguay. In Argentina, it is a species of temperate climates; north of the 30th parallel, it occurs in the Andean foothills and the wet forests of Misiones Province. Southwards, it is widely distributed to beyond the 40th parallel.
Check List | 2012
Paul Smith; Pier Cacciali; Karina Atkinson; Helen Pheasey; Martha Motte
New distributional data are provided for 12 species of amphibian in Departamento San Pedro, Paraguay. Records are from the Reserva Natural Laguna Blanca, a small private reserve located in an area of transition from Atlantic Forest to Cerrado-type habitats. The chronic under-sampling of amphibian populations in Paraguay is highlighted.
Herpetologica | 2007
Pier Cacciali; Santiago Carreira; Norman J. Scott
Phalotris nigrilatus Ferrarezzi, 1993 is a poorly known species described from a single specimen from Paraguay. Two new specimens make possible a more detailed description of the species, including a description of the hemipenis, and support the validity of the species. Hemipenial morphology provides another character that further supports the inclusion of the species in the nasutus group. We describe variation within the species, probable sexual dimorphism, and the known distribution. It will be necessary to do further work in Paraguay to establish the conservation status of this apparently rare and endemic species.
Journal of Herpetology | 2009
Pier Cacciali; Norman J. Scott; Rainer Guenther; Ricardo J. Sawaya; Francisco Brusquetti; Frederick Bauer
Abstract The genus Simophis includes Brazilian and Paraguayan colubrid snakes with color patterns mimetic with triad-banded coral snakes of the genus Micrurus. Currently Simophis is thought to include two species: Simophis rhinostoma, described from Brazil and recorded in the literature from Paraguay, and Simophis rohdei, considered to be a Paraguayan endemic. The species are differentiated by the number of scale rows at midbody (15 in S. rhinostoma and 17 in S. rohdei) and the number of supralabial scales (7 in S. rhinostoma and 8 in S. rohdei). A review of specimens from Paraguay and Brazil indicate variation in the number of supralabial scales, and a reexamination of the holotype of Rhinaspis rohdei showed that it actually has 15 middorsal scale rows and not 17 as was indicated in the original description. A single specimen from Brasilia has 17 dorsal scale rows. The genus Simophis must be considered to be monotypic (S. rhinostoma), having 15 dorsal scale rows (rarely 17) and between 7 and 9 supralabials (rarely 5). The species has a unique combination of characters, some associated with arboreality (slender body, long tail, laterally keeled ventral scales), and one found in fossorial snakes (shovel-shaped rostral).
Cuadernos de Herpetología | 2018
Hugo Enrique Cabral Beconi; Pier Cacciali
Atractus paraguayensis is a medium-sized snake distributed in northern Argentina, south-eastern Brazil and central and south of Paraguay. There are no precise locality of the type locality of this species, however this subject hasc been discussed in several works. In this contribution, we performed a historical investigation to restrict the type locality of A. paraguayensis . In this brief historical account, we provide the precise type locality Atractus paraguayensis , being the locality Bernal Cue, this also affect to the type locality of other snakes described from Paraguay.
Herpetologica | 2015
Hugo Cabral; Pier Cacciali
Abstract: Phalotris is a genus of Neotropical snakes with secretive habits that is poorly represented in collections. We describe a new species of Phalotris belonging to the bilineatus group from near Filadelfia in the Dry Chaco of Paraguay. The new species differs from P. lemniscatus and P. spegazzinii by having wider white and black neck collars, a wider black transverse ring in the anal region, and different coloration of the black dorsolateral lines. It differs from P. multipunctatus in the presence of a caudal ring, wider white and black neck collars, and having the entire head black without white marks. In addition, the new species is the only member of the bilineatus group with the black ventral coloration reduced to scattered dots. The new species is described based on three road-killed specimens found since 1995. The new species is currently considered endemic to xerophytic areas of the Paraguayan Chaco. Five species of Phalotris are now known to occur in Paraguay. Resumo: Phalotris es un género de serpientes neotropicales con hábitos fosoriales, y escasamente representado en colecciones. Aquí se describe una nueva especie de Phalotris perteneciente al grupo bilineatus del Chaco Seco en Paraguay, cercano a la ciudad de Filadelfia. La nueva especie difiere de P. lemniscatus y P. spegazzinii por tener el collar blanco, negro y el anillo caudal todos más anchos, y por la coloración de las líneas dorsolaterales; de P. multipunctatus por la presencia del collar caudal, collares blancos y negros más anchos, y la cabeza totalmente negra sin marcas blancas. Además, la nueva especie es el único miembro del grupo bilineatus con la coloración negra ventral reducida a unos pocos puntos dispersos. La nueva especie es descrita en base a tres ejemplares encontrados muertos en rutas, desde 1995. La nueva especie es endémica del Chaco Paraguayo en áreas xerofíticas. Actualmente con la descripción de una nueva especie se eleva a cinco las especies de Phalotris conocidas para Paraguay.
Check List | 2015
Luciano Javier Avila; Cristian Hernán Fulvio Pérez; Pier Cacciali
Liolaemus ditadai is a rare liolaemid lizard originally described from Salinas Grandes salt-pans flat, in the border between Cordoba and Catamarca Province in central Argentina. Only a few specimens of this species are known. Here, we present a new record that result in a significant extension of the known distribution of the species, which is currently considered to be restricted to a small area in Salinas Grandes. In addition, we comment on previous records of the species in central Argentina.
Cuadernos de Herpetología | 2014
Paul Smith; Pier Cacciali; Norman J. Scott; Hugo del Castillo; Helen Pheasey; Karina Atkinson
Philodryas livida is a rare Cerrado endemic snake known from very few specimens in a handful of localities in Brazil. Here we report the first specimen from Paraguay collected in campo limpio Cerrado in Departamento San Pedro. The importance of the continued protection of the Reserva Natural Laguna Blanca for the conservation of this globally-threatened species is highlighted.
Check List | 2011
Norman J. Scott; Pier Cacciali
An old published record for “ Crocodilurus ” in Paraguay was almost certainly based on Dracaena paraguayensis Amaral, 1950. Thus, D. paraguayensis occurs from the Brazilian Pantanal south along the Paraguay River as far as Fuerte Olimpo, and Crocodilurus lacertinus (Daudin, 1802) remains restricted to the Amazon and Orinoco river drainages.
Cuadernos de Herpetología | 2009
Martha Motte; Karina Núñez; Pier Cacciali; Francisco Brusquetti; Norman J. Scott; Aída Luz Aquino