Herpetology has long navigated through tangled terrain in Papua New Guinea, where species mislabeling and sparse sampling have clouded scientific understanding. But a recent revision has brought rare clarity—and four unexpected discoveries, reports Akhyari Hananto for Mongabay-Indonesia.
In April 2025, Fred Kraus of the University of Michigan published a study in Zootaxa identifying four new tree snakes in the genus Dendrelaphis, each endemic to a different island in the Louisiade and Woodlark archipelagos in PNG’s Milne Bay.
The species:
According to the Reptile Database, Papua New Guinea is home to at least 147 species of snake among its 424 documented reptile species—highlighting both its exceptional biodiversity and the vast gaps in scientific knowledge.
Beyond their aesthetics, these snakes underscore the role of “island speciation” in biodiversity. Kraus’s findings—based on hemipenial morphology and color patterns—correct decades of taxonomic muddle.
They also sound an implicit warning: these species, though newly named, may already be under threat from mining, deforestation, and human encroachment. For example, multiple major forest conversion projects have been proposed for Woodlark Island over the past twenty years.
This story first appeared on Mongabay
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and Mongabay, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.
2025-06-10T13:15:06Z