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Indian wolf snake, is a species of nonvenomous snake found in South Asia and Southeast Asia. Early naturalists have suggested its resemblance to the venomous common krait as an instance of indian wolf snake .
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कृपया ध्यान दें इस वीडियो में किसी भी प्राणी या सर्प को कोई नुकसान नहीं पहुंचाया गया है ।हम लोगों ने अपनी जान की परवाह न करते हुए सांप की जान बचाया । यह वीडियो इंसानों को सांपों के प्रति जागरूक करने के उद्देश्य से बनाया गया है । इस वीडियो के माध्यम से यह बताया गया कि यदि हम सांपों को नुकसान ना पहुंचाएं तो वह हमें जरा भी नुकसान नहीं पहुंचाएंगे । अतः आप लोगों से मेरा विनम्र अनुरोध है कि आपको जहां कहीं भी किसी भी तरह का सर्प दिखाई दे कृपया आप उसे मारे नहीं । अपने निकटतम सर्प मित्र से संपर्क करके उन्हें सुरक्षित जंगल में छुड़वाने का कष्ट करें । धन्यवाद । यदि वीडियो जानकारी पूरे लगे तो कृपया चैनल को सब्सक्राइब करें और ज्यादा से ज्यादा शेयर करें

Lycodon aulicus, commonly known as the Indian wolf snake, is a species of nonvenomous snake found in South Asia and Southeast Asia. Early naturalists have suggested its resemblance to the venomous common krait as an instance of Batesian mimicry.

Scientific classification
Kingdom:AnimaliaPhylum:ChordataClass:ReptiliaOrder:SquamataSuborder:SerpentesFamily:ColubridaeGenus:LycodonSpecies:

L. aulicus
This snake is often confused with the common krait. The presence of a loreal shield can be used to distinguish it from kraits.

The following is a description of various forms from Albert Günther's Reptiles of British India (1864).

Snout broad, much depressed, long, spatulate, with the upper lip swollen, and without canthus rostralis. Rostral shield very low, broad, slightly bent backwards on the upper surface of the snout; anterior frontals [= internasals] very small; posterior frontals [= prefrontals] longer than broad, much more so in adult specimens than in young ones; there is a lateral notch between the anterior and posterior frontals, in which the inner anterior angle of the loreal is received; the posterior frontals have an obtuse lateral angle corresponding to the suture between loreal and praeocular; occipitals elongate. Nostril small, directed upwards, between two nasals, the anterior of which is situated on the foremost part of the snout. Loreal single, large, nearly twice as long as broad. Praeocular single, in contact with the vertical [= frontal] and with the third labial; specimens in which it does not reach the vertical are very scarce. Two postoculars; supraciliary rather small. Nine upper labials, the third, fourth, and fifth of which enter the orbit. Temporals numerous, scale-like. Scales smooth, with a minute apical groove, in seventeen rows. Abdomen and tail with an angular ridge on each side. Ventrals 183-209; anal bifid, in a few specimens entire; subcaudals 57-77. Each maxillary is armed with two fangs in front, placed in a transverse line, the outer being much larger than the inner; the lateral longitudinal series of teeth commences at some distance from the fangs; they are small, from four to twelve in number, the last being considerably larger than the others; pterygoido-palatine teeth small, of equal size; mandible with two or three fangs on each side and with a series of small teeth.

Coloration variable.

I. Continental varieties. The posterior frontals are moderately elongate-in young specimens nearly as broad as long. Each upper labial with a brown spot. [To this category belong also specimens from the Philippine Islands.]

Var. a. Uniform brown above, without collar: Malayan peninsula, Bengal, Madras.

Var. b. Uniform brown above, with a while collar: Madras.

Var. c. Brown or greyish brown, With indistinct traces of a white network, and with a white collar, more distinct in young specimens than in old ones: Coast of Malabar, Pinang, Malayan peninsula, Gamboja, Philippine Islands, Timor.

Var. d. Ferruginous or chestnut-brown, with white, brown-edged cross bars on the back, which are sometimes bifid on the sides, the branches of one band joining a branch of the preceding and following bands. The first band forms a collar; those on the hind part of the body gradually become indistinct. This variety is very common, and similar to, but specifically distinct from, the snake figured by Russell (i. pl. 16): we have received it from Pinang, Bengal, Nepal, Kangra (Himalayas), the Dekkan, and the Anamallay Mountains.

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Catégories
Chats de Race Bengal
Mots-clés
snake, lizard, snake vs lizard

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