19 



Tafitilla vulcani Campbell 

 Tantilla viilcani Csunphell, 1998: 11. 



Holotype.— UTA R-21772, adult female collected by Carlos Miron, April-May 1986. 



Type-locality. — Finca El Carmen, km 197.5 on CA-2, 518 m elevation, Depto. 

 Quezaltenango, Guatemala. 



Distribution. — Low to moderate elevations (518-610 m) of the Pacific versant from 

 eastern Oaxaca, Mexico, to south-central Guatemala. 



Systematic references. — Campbell (1998). 



Remarks. — This name was given by Campbell (1998) to material reported erroneously as 

 T.fusca by Slevin (1939) and T.jani by Wilson and Meyer (1971) and Wilson (1985i). In 

 addition to the material reported by Campbell (1998) in the original description, Wilson 

 (1982b) reported a specimen of this species from extreme southeastern Chiapas, Mexico (CAS 

 140961). 



Tantilla wilcoxi Stejneger 

 raA7/;7/<3 w/cox/ Stejneger, 1902: 156. 

 Tantilla deviatrix Barbour, 1916: 93. 

 Tantilla wilcoxi n^bricata Smith, 1942: 40. 



Holotype.— USNM 19674, juvenile male collected in 1892 by Timothy E. Wilcox, M.D. 



Type-locality. — Fort Huachuca, Huachuca Mts., Cochise Co., Arizona, USA. 



Distribution. — Moderate to intermediate elevations of both versants from extreme 

 southern Arizona southward and eastward through southwestern Chihuahua, northeastern 

 Sinaloa, central Durango, Zacatecas, southeastern Coahuila, southern Nuevo Leon, and 

 western San Luis Potosi in Mexico. 



Systematic references. — Cole and Hardy (1981); Liner (1983). 



Remarks. — The name Tantilla deviatrix Barbour, 1916, formerly attached to a purported 

 subspecies of T. bocourti by Smith and Laufe (1945), was placed in the synonymy of this 

 species by McDiarmid (1992). 



Tantilla yaquia Smith 

 Tantilla yaquia Smith, 1942: 41. 

 Tantilla bogerti Hanweg, 1944: 1. 



Holotype. — Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University (MCZ) 43274, female, 

 collected in August 1936 by Howard S. Gentry. 



Type-locality. — Guasaremos, Rio Mayo, Chihuahua, Mexico. 



Distribution. — Low, moderate, and intermediate elevations of the Pacific versant from 

 southeastern Arizona, USA, to Nayarit, Mexico. 



Systematic references. — McDiarmid (1968, 1977); Cole and Hardy (1981). 



