Re. 33 VIPERA RUSSELLI(Russel’s Viper)
Phylum: Chordata
Class : Reptilia
Order : Squamata
Family :
Viperidae
Genus : Daboia
Species:
russelii
DESCRIPTION
Russell's viper (Daboia
russelii) is a venomous
snake in the family Viperidae native to the Indian subcontinent and one
of the big four snakes in India. It
was described in
1797 by George Shaw and Frederick Polydore Nodder, and named
after Patrick Russell, who wrote
about it in his 1796 work An account of Indian serpents, collected on
the coast of Coromandel.
The head is flattened, triangular, and distinct from the neck.
The snout is blunt, rounded, and raised. The nostrils are large, each in the
middle of a large, single nasal
scale.
The lower edge of the nasal scale touches the nasorostral scale. The supranasal
scale has a strong crescent shape and separates the nasal from the nasorostral
scale anteriorly. The rostral scale is as broad as it is
high.
The crown of the head is covered with irregular, strongly
fragmented scales. The supraocular scales are narrow, single, and separated by six
to nine scales across the head. The eyes are large, flecked with yellow or
gold, and surrounded by 10–15 circumorbital scales. The snake has 10–12 supralabials, the fourth and fifth of
which are significantly larger. The eye is separated from the supralabials by
three or four rows of suboculars. Of the two pairs of chin shields, the front pair is notably
enlarged. The two maxillary bones support at least two and at the most five or
six pairs of fangs at a time: the first are active and the rest
replacements. The fangs attain a length of 16.5 mm (0.65 in) in
the average specimen.
The body is stout, the cross-section of which is rounded to
circular. The dorsal scales are strongly keeled; only the lowest row is
smooth. Mid-body, the dorsal scales number 27–33. The ventral scales number 153–180.
The anal plate is not divided. The
tail is short—about 14% of the total length—with the paired subcaudals numbering 41–68.
Russell's viper is found in India, Sri Lanka,
Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan. Populations from South-East Asia previously
assigned to this species are now considered to be part of a different
species, Daboia
siamensis. The type locality is
listed as "India".
IUCN Status: Not evaluated
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