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         Cobra Snakes:     more books (71)
  1. Elapidae by Common Name: Egyptian Cobra, Deaf Adder, Harlequin Snake, Black Snake, Death Adder, Copperhead, Asp, Candy Stick, Monocled Cobra
  2. Motor Trend Magazine November 1975 (Ford's snake is back! New Cobra II! Special Section: 1976 new car buyer's guide!)
  3. MUSCLE MUSTANGS & FAST FORDS February 2001 Volume 14 No. 2 (Magazine. Mod Motor Maniacs. Nitrous-Fed Super Snake. 4.6 Cobras.)
  4. The Cobra (Wildlife Habits & Habitat) by Carl R. Green, 1986-02
  5. Cobras (Fangs! An Imagination Library Series) by Eric Ethan, 1995-09
  6. SNAKES VICTIMS OF PARASITES: Parasites of Viper and Cobra by Prof Dr Bilqees FM, Prof. Dr. Nasira Khatoon, et all 2010-06-13
  7. The Spitting Cobras of Africa (Animals & the Environment) by James Martin, Joe McDonald, 1995-01
  8. Kit Car [ Vol. 22 No. 1, Jan. 2003 ] The Car Builder's Authority (New Snake in Town: Boyd Coddington enters the Cobra scene, Vol. 22 No. 1)
  9. Cobras (Naturebooks) by Mary Ann McDonald, 1996-07
  10. Snake Pilot : Flying the Cobra Attack Helicopter in Vietnam by Randy R. Zahn, 2003-01-01
  11. Cobras (Nature Watch) by Sylvia A. Johnson, 2006-12-22
  12. Magic Tree House Research Guide #23: Snakes and Other Reptiles: A Nonfiction Companion to Magic Tree House #45: A Crazy Day with Cobras (A Stepping Stone Book(TM)) by Mary Pope Osborne, Natalie Pope Boyce, 2011-01-11
  13. Snake Versus Man: A Guide to Dangerous and Common Harmless Snakes of Southern Africa by Johan Marais, 1986-01
  14. Shanta, Sunil and the Cobra by Kay King, 1968-07

61. Snakes And Reptiles - Great Valley Serpentarium - Snake Museum
My breeding pair of which I incubated and raised from hatchlings are fairly docilesnakes. They will occasionally hood like a cobra but display their body
http://www.snakemuseum.com/cobra.htm
False Water Cobra
or
Brazilian Smooth Snake
(Hydrodynastes gigas) By William B. Gillingham
Great Valley Serpentarium
Lodi, California, U.S.A. After doing a little research I believe I have finally correctly identified my False Water Cobras as Hydrodynastes bicinctus. I have been calling them Hydrodynastes gigas. According to John M. Mehrtens, Living Snakes of the World, 1987, there are three similar snakes. There is the Brazilian Smooth Snake, "False Water Cobra", Cyclagras gigas which occurs in Eastern Bolivia, Paraguay, southern Brazil and northern Argentina. The other two are Hydrodynastes bicinctus and Hydrodynastes schultzi found from French Guiana, west to Colombia, and in much of Amazonian Brazil. The author, Ludwig Trutnau, Non-venomous Snakes, 1986 (English) describes only one species of Hydrodynastes that being Hydrodynastes gigas. Several other authors use the name Hydrodynastes bicinctus. From further studies, it may show that they are all of the same genus. Hydrodynastes is a rear-fanged snake. I have found very little information on the toxicity of its venom. Supposedly the venom prevents blood clotting. I have never been bitten by my pair or their offspring. Use caution when offering food to these very aggressive feeders.

62. The Cobra......................................
cobra is the common name for members of the family of venomous snakes,Elapidae, known for their intimidating looks and deadly bite.
http://www.geocities.com/thesciencefiles/cobra/page.html
Cobra is the common name for members of the family of venomous snakes, Elapidae, known for their intimidating looks and deadly bite. These reptiles are found throughout the Philippines, southern Asia, and Africa. Cobras are recognized by the hoods behind their heads. A cobra opens this hood when it is angry or disturbed; the hood is created by the extension of the ribs behind the cobra's head.
Cobras will seldom attack unprovoked. When threatened, however, the cobra will make full use of its menacing appearance and deadly venom. Cobras are famous for their use by Oriental snake charmers because they are intelligent, respond well to visual cues, and are of spectacular appearance.
Cobras are common in Asia and Africa, and there are different types in each location.
ASIAN COBRAS:
The King Cobra , at up to 18 feet long, is the world's longest poisonous snake. It can have a head as big as a man’s hand, and can stand tall enough to look you in the eye. Its venom, although not as potent as other cobras, is very deadly because more of it ... up to 7 ml, is delivered with each bite.

63. Snakes
Elapids. Naja. * Black Spitting cobra, Black Spitting cobra (Naja nigricollis).Red Spitting cobra, Red Spitting cobra (Naja pallida) Northern Tanzania.
http://www.geocities.com/subocularis/snakes.html
Click on the snake for info and a picture.
Colubrids
Lampropeltis
Gray Banded Kingsnake ( Lampropeltis alterna
Thayeri Gray Banded Kingsnake ( Lampropeltis mexicana thayeri
Scarlet Kingsnake ( Lampropeltis triangulum elapsoides
Elaphe
Black Ratsnake ( Elaphe obsoleta
Diadolphis
Northern Ringsnake ( Diadolphis puntatus
Elapids
Naja
Black Spitting Cobra ( Naja nigricollis
Red Spitting Cobra ( Naja pallida
Northern Tanzania.
Banded Egyptian Cobra ( Naja haje annulifera
Ophiophagus
King Cobra ( Ophiophagus hannah
Malaysia
Hemachatus
Rinkhal's Cobra ( Hemachatus haemachatus
South Africa
Dendroaspis
Black Mamba ( Dendroaspis polylepis
Etheopia south, along Western Africa, to northern South Africa.
Green Mamba ( Dendroaspis angusticeps
East Africa, from Kenya to Zimbabwe
Vipers
Agkistrodon
Broad-Banded Copperhead ( Agkistrodon contortrix laticinctus Middle US, oklahoma, Illinois, etc. Picture not yet aailable! Trans-Pecos Copperhead ( Agkistrodon contortrix pictigaster West Texas and extreme Southeast New Mexico. Southern Copperhead ( Agkistrodon contortrix contortrix Eastern US from Massachusetts to Texas.

64. Animals - Snakes Screen Saver And Wallpaper Photos By Webshots
Sports. Transportation. Travel. Gallery Home Animals snakes, Click on any phototo preview and download! King cobra © Tom Brakefield, © Tom Brakefield Hot!
http://w2.webshots.com/g/25/538-sh.html
DOWNLOAD WEBSHOTS - FREE GET CD HELP Gallery Home ... View Cart
Browse Photos
Top Rated 3D Art Animals Editor's Picks ... Animals : Snakes Click on any photo to preview and download! Sorted by: Shuffled Newest Top Downloads Download this page of photos Regular High Quality Page 1 of 2.
© Tom Brakefield
Hot!
© Tom Brakefield
Hot!
© Roma Stock
© Tom Brakefield
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© David Davis
Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © SuperStock, Inc. Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! © Tom Brakefield Hot! Webshots Unlimited Feature More photos Page 1 of 2. More Webshots: Webshots Unplugged Affiliate Program Auction Photos Terms ... Twofold Photos, Inc.

65. The Venomous Snakes Of South Africa
Cape cobra Page. Scale Count Page. Other Links West Coast snakes of SouthAfrica; Venomous snakes of Africa. Last Updated 16 May 2001. HOME.
http://ntri.tamuk.edu/africa/south_africa.html
Venomous Snakes of South Africa
Scientific Name Common Name Picture Links Links to More Information Aspidelaps lubricus African Coral Cobra Picture 1
Picture 2

Picture 3

Picture 4
... Scale Count Page Aspidelaps scutatus African Shield-nose Snake Picture 1
Picture 2

Picture 3

Picture 4
... Scale Count Page Bitis albanica Albany Adder Scale Count Page Bitis arietans Puff Adder Picture 1
Picture 2

Picture 3

Picture 4
... Scale Count Page Bitis armata Southern Adder Scale Count Page Bitis atropos Berg Adder Picture 1
Picture 2
Berg Adder Page Scale Count Page Bitis caudalis Horned Adder Picture 1 Picture 2 Picture 3 Picture 4 ... Scale Count Page Bitis cornuta Many-horned Adder Picture 1 Picture 2 Many-Horned Adder Page General Information ... Scale Count Page Bitis gabonica Gaboon Viper or Gaboon Adder Picture 1 Picture 2 Picture 3 Picture 4 ... Gaboon Viper Information (In German, Part in English)

66. JungleWalk - Snake Movie And Snake Video, Snake Posters
AllPosters.com cobra (Blacklight) cobra (Blacklight) Buy this Poster from AllPosters.comSnake The Essential Visual Guide to the World of snakes Snake The
http://www.junglewalk.com/ZV186000.asp
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Reptiles

Snakes

Constrictors

Vipers and Cobras
... Reptiles
Snakes Brown Tree Snake
Rodda, Gordon H., U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Counts: Video:54 Audio:11 sites:119 Ball Python Reptilia RM Short clip of Ball Python, hatched and crawling Boa Berenty Reserve - Duke University MOV Boa in action Boa Constrictor ThinkQuest - Biodiversity in our classroom Streaming RAM Video clip of a Boa Constrictor Boa Constrictor The Belize Zoo MOV Clip of Boa Constrictor Brazilian Rainbow Boa Reptilia RM Short clip of Brazilian Rainbow Boa Burmese Python Honolulu Zoo WMV Close up shot of this python. Green Anaconda National Geographic Streaming RAM Green Anaconda Mona Boa Nature Web Network Streaming RAM Boa slithering down a tree Belled Viper Smithsonian Magazine MOV Clip of Belled Viper Cobra Jeff Corwin Fanatics - Your ultimate guide to everything Jeff Corwin MOV Short clip Cobra University of Kansas - Social Studies Education Network AVI Clip of snake charmer, performing monkey and bear in India

67. JungleWalk - Viper And Cobra Movie And Viper And Cobra Video, Viper And Cobra Po
All Animals.Vertebrates.Reptiles.snakes. Vipersand cobras Egyptian cobra ClipArt.com,
http://www.junglewalk.com/ZV188000.asp
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Reptiles

Snakes

Constrictors

Vipers and Cobras
... Snakes
Vipers and Cobras Egyptian Cobra
ClipArt.com
Counts: Video:8 Audio:1 sites:13 Horned Viper PBS Streaming RAM video clip of horned viper, one of the deadliest, with commentary Belled Viper Smithsonian Magazine MOV Clip of Belled Viper Cobra Jeff Corwin Fanatics - Your ultimate guide to everything Jeff Corwin MOV Short clip Cobra University of Kansas - Social Studies Education Network AVI Clip of snake charmer, performing monkey and bear in India Common Viper AVI Clip of an Adder (Common Viper) Common Viper AVI Clip of Adder (Common Viper) Spitting Cobra National Geographic - Explorer Extra Streaming RAM Cobra Hunt in Myanmar White lipped Viper Cinenet - Film and Video Image Library MOV Viper flicking its tongue
JungleWalk.com's Shopping Guide

68. Kosmoi: Snakes
Some types are poisonous, like Rattlesnake, Copperhead, some Coral snakes,and cobra. There are 5 families that live in North America.
http://kosmoi.com/Life/Animals/Snakes/
Videos Life Animals Books ... VHS
Snakes
Nature Agriculture Animals Biology ... Murder of a Snake in the Grass Denise Swanson Verdi Janell Cannon DK Readers: Slinky, Scaly Snakes (Level 2: Beginning to Read Alone) Jennifer Dussling Elizabeth Peters The Foxfire Book: Hog Dressing, Log Cabin Building, Mountain Crafts and Foods, Planting by the Signs, Snake Lore, Hunting Tales, Faith Healing, Moon Eliot Wigginton Snakes Tattoos Jan Sovak Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake Handling and Redemption in Southern Appalachia Dennis Covington The Incredible Secret Formula Book: Make Your Own Rock Candy, Jelly Snakes, Face Paint, Slimy Putty, and 55 More Awesome Things Unknown Snake Hips: Belly Dancing and How I Found True Love Anne Thomas Soffee Snake: The Essential Visual Guide to the World of Snakes Chris Mattison, Christopher Mattison by NR Snakes are small, legless reptiles, and, like all reptiles, have scales and tails. They range in size from 3 inches long to 20 feet long. Snakes need camouflage, so their scales may be different colors; black, green, white, and gray with brown diamonds, and many more. They are cold blooded, that means that their blood temperature is the same as their environment. A normal life span can be anywhere from 30 years to 40 years, depending on the species.
Types
There are many different types of snakes, such as the Cobra, Boa, Python, and Vipers. Some types are poisonous, like Rattlesnake, Copperhead, some Coral Snakes, and Cobra.

69. Max Wendroff Films
Florida video production houseCategory Arts Movies Filmmaking Documentary...... Homosassa History, Key West Fantasy Festival Howto-eat fire love sex women drinkingfucking tits history Florida history rattlesnakes snakes cobra coral snake
http://www.maxwendrofffilms.com/
Max Wendroff Films Max Wendroff films produces, directs and presents a remarkable collection of unusual, scientific, historic, educational, travel and how-to videos in existence. We can also film videos and place them on your web site at a very reasonable fee. Florida Historical videos Documentarie s Travel ... Email
For speedy results, use the Max Wendroff Films Search Engine

70. Cobras
Translate this page Philodryas aestivus - cobra verde, Bothrops moojeni - Jararaca do brejo. Sapos- Frogs, Lagartos - Lizards, cobras - snakes, Tartaruga - Turtle, Aves - Birds,
http://eco.ib.usp.br/labvert/SiteItirapina/cobras.htm

71. Snakes - Miss Lord - Wiscasset Primary School
The cobra is one of the only snakes that can slither on the ground with its headup. Some cobras eat small things like rats and others eat huge things.
http://lincoln.midcoast.com/~wps/2lord/snakes.html
Snakes
by Mark, Bryan, Alex, and Jared
(We've been working on researching, writing, and editing this story for months. We hope you enjoy reading it.) Some snakes are deadly. The python is not deadly, but it can kill huge things. It can kill an alligator. They are found mainly in Africa and South East Asia. Pythons, boas, and anacondas are related. They are the largest snakes in the world. They are not poisonous but kill by constriction. This means they squeeze their prey to death. Some species can kill people, but not very many can. Some snakes have very few predators. Some have only just one. Cottonmouth Cottonmouths have a triangular shaped head. They are really poisonous. They really hurt when they bite. They are really dangerous. They can be found from southern Virginia to Missouri and in all southeastern United States. They live in ponds, swamps, and near rivers. They make their burrows in muddy ground near the rivers. They may also take over another animal's den like a muskrat's den. Boas Boas are big and strong. Boas can kill deer and other big animals such as crocodiles. They choke their prey to kill it. Then they swallow their prey because they can open their mouths wide.

72. Snakes
Rodin ; 10 November 1998 snakes in a Hole ; 22 April 1998 (2) Something About theDevil ; 25 March 1998 (2) Culebras ; 16 February 1997 (3) cobra ; 18 September
http://www.angelfire.com/tx2/vogelein/Snakes.htm
Snakes Snakes seem to be the animal that most readily lends itself to symbolic meaning. Every time I have a snake dream, I tend to want to try to interpret the dream to find out what the snake stood for. It is difficult to look at a snake in a dream as simply a snake. Dreams in which snakes have appeared:
  • 14 February 2003 "Decapitated Snake" 01 September 2002 "Enriching the Soul" 25 January 2001 "Snakes in the Treetops" 06 December 1999 "Rodin" ... 11 July 1982 "Freedom Street" 09 October 1981 24 July 1981 "Venom Through My Leg" 05 November 1980 "Snake Venom"
  • Dream Journal Home Page

    73. Worldhop Journals: Thailand
    These include the King cobra, several types of spitting cobra, at least two varietiesof deadly but usually passive sea snakes, Banded Kraits, Russell's Viper
    http://www.worldhop.com/Journals/J5/SNAKES.HTM
    Snakes Alive!
    Maybe you remember those early behavior studies from the 1950s where a researcher wiggled a rubber hose along the floor of a monkey cagemonkeys that had been raised in captivity and had never seen a snake.
    And lo and behold, these primates go into a climbing frenzy, screeching and howling and trying to squeeze out the top of their cages like botulism tomatoes. And thus it was proved that there's much more to our natural fear of snakes than Johnnie teasing Suzie, Freudian foolishness, or those ghastly 1950s 3-D jungle movie matinees.
    The snake is a powerful symbol. Our earliest archeological remnants found in the Mediterranean and Japan are of an earth/snake mother. The hood of the cobra protected the Buddha, while the rattler fought the eagle in Aztec images and on Mexican flags and attempted to scare off the British on our early American flags. O ne of the handlers at the Snake Farm in Bangkok prepares to grab a Siamese Cobra with a bad attitude In fact, one of the few images more powerful than the symbol of the snake is a real one, a great big killer one, free and slithering only a few feet from you. So powerful, in fact, that we quickly get in touch with our primate roots and scoot to the top of our cages.

    74. The Cold Blooded News - Vol.29, No.3, Mar. 2002
    The king cobra's diet mainly consists of other snakes, namely nonvenomous snakessuch as Asian rat snakes and pythons (although they are known to eat Indian
    http://coloherp.org/cb-news/Vol-29/cbn-0203/KingCobra.php
    The Cold Blooded News
    The Newsletter of the Colorado Herpetological Society
    Volume 29, Number 3; March, 2002
    Aurora Man Strangled
    Black Pine Snakes

    The King Cobra
    Wandering Newts

    Ask the Vet

    "Therms" of Endearment

    Keeping Large Snakes

    Next Issue
    April 2002

    PREVIOUS ISSUES
    February 2002
    January 2002 Earlier Issues About the ... CHS Home Page
    The King Cobra ( Ophiophagus hannah
    by Vidyuth Chengappa Undergraduate Student, Case Western Reserve University
    Reprinted from Notes from NOAH, the newsletter of the Northern Ohio Association of Herpetologists, Vol.29, No.2, December 2001. The King Cobra, Ophiophagus hannah , is a prime example of evolution due to natural selection. Its size, deadliness, and intelligence make the king cobra a top predator with very few natural enemies. Its ability to capture and immobilize prey as well as being able to defend itself using its intimidating and deadly defense mechanisms have allowed this species to survive over time. However, humans have recently become a great threat to this species. King cobras are found in northern and eastern India, east to southern China (including Hong Kong and Hainan), south throughout the Malay Peninsula, and also in the island nations Indonesia and the Philippines. The king cobra inhabits dense or open forests, mangrove swamps, bamboo thickets and savannas. They are often found around human settlements. With the ability to swim and climb trees, king cobras are designed to inhabit all sorts of territories. They also live at high altitudes, residing in the mountainous regions of India up to altitudes of 6500 feet above sea level.

    75. King Cobra
    Snake snacks The King cobra's favourite meal is snakes! Indeed, their Latinname means snakeeater from ophis snake and phagein to eat.
    http://www.szgdocent.org/cc/c-cking.htm
    KING COBRA
    Ophiophagus hannah
    Giant cobra: The King Cobra is the largest venomous snake. Its venom is not as toxic as other cobras but it is dangerous to humans because it can inject a much larger amount of venom. Drop for drop, a King Cobra's venom is actually less lethal than a Common Cobra's. However, it injects as much as 6-7ml of venom per bite, enough to kill an elephant, or 20 people.
    However, despite its size and reputation for ferocity, the King is not aggressive and actually prefers to flee where possible. It only attacks people when it is cornered, in self defence or to protect its eggs. Throughout its entire range from India to Indonesia, the King causes fewer than five human deaths a year, about one-fifth as many as caused by rattlers in North America. The King Cobra's fangs are short (8-10mm) because they are fixed. VITAL STATISTICS
    Size:
    Average 3, record length 5.58m.

    76. Names Of Venemous Snakes
    Coral snakes, hannah Paranaja multifasciata Pseudohaje species Pseudohaje goldii Walterinnesiaaegyptia, Water cobras Ringhals Anchita's cobra Egyptian or brown
    http://www-surgery.ucsd.edu/ent/DAVIDSON/Snake/2NAMES.htm
    VENOMOUS SNAKES:
    Alphabetical listing by scientific names
    (Adapted from: Snake Venom Poisoning , pages 15-20,
    by Dr. Findlay E. Russell.
    New York: Scholium International, Inc., 1983) Vipers Adders (see also Asps and Vipers) Atractaspis bibronii
    Atractaspis congica
    Bitis arietans
    Bitis atropos
    Bitis caudalis
    Bitis cornuta
    Bitis gabonica Bitis inornata Bitis peringuey Causus depfilppi Causus lichtensteinii Causus rhombeatus Vipera berus Vipera kaznakovi Vipera lebetina Vipera superciliaris Vipera ursinii Bribron's burrowing adder Congo burrowing adder Puff adder Berg adder Horned puff adder Horned adder Gaboon adder Cape puff adder Peringuey's adder Snouted night adder Lichtenstein night adder Common night adder European or cross adder Caucasus adder Desert adder African lowland adder Meadow adder
    Asps (see also Adders and Vipers)
    Cerastes vipera Vipera aspis Cleopatra's asp European asp Vipers (see also Adders and Asps) Atheris species Atractaspis species Bitis gabonica Bitis naricornis Bothrops nasutus Bothrops nummifer Bothrops schlegelii Cerastes cerastes Cerastes vipera Echis carinatus Echis coloratus Pseudocerastes persicus Vipera ammodytes Vipera aspis Vipera berus Vipera latasti Vipera lebetina Vipera russelli Vipera ursinii Vipera xanthina Vipera xanthina palaestinae Vipera xanthina xanthina African bush vipers Mole vipers Gaboon viper Rhinoceros viper Hognose viper Jumping viper Eyelash viper Horned viper Sahara sand viper Saw-scaled viper Saw-scaled/Arabian viper Palestine/Persian horned viper Long-nosed viper Asp viper European viper Lataste's/snub-nosed viper

    77. SNAKE SITE
    More good cobra info than you thought you'd ever want to know. snakes Website The snake website from Liza Daley with links, care sheets and more.
    http://www.xmission.com/~gastown/herpmed/serpent.htm
    CONTENT="reptiles,snakes,serpents,squamates,herpetology">
    SELECTED SNAKE-RELATED WEBSITES ON THE WWW
    Amphibian and Reptile Books and Publications
    Copperbelly Water Snake -New Federal Regulations and Background Document on Species
    Interactive Guide to the Snakes of Massachusetts
    University of Texas Ophidian Research Colony
    Books on Snakes
    On Timber Rattlesnakes from Smithsonian Magazine-December, 1997
    Moccasins of the Shawnee Forest
    Timber Rattlesnakes in Wisconsin
    Slither's Home Page Lots of snake and other herp info plus how to join the slither (snake-related) listserv forum
    Molecular Biology of the Kingsnakes
    Paramyxovirus in Snakes ....from the University of Florida, College of Veterinary Medicine
    Inclusion Body Disease of Boas and Pythons from the University of Florida, College of Veterinary Medicine
    South Florida Kingsnake Taxonomy
    A Guide to North American Snakes
    Snakebite-Latest Information on Emergency First-Aid
    Captive Care of Snakes Nuts and bolts of what you need and how to. Recommended starter page.
    Ball Pythons and More
    Brown Tree Snake Information Website
    Snakes of North America
    American Pit Vipers - Information Website ...
    Lawrence M. Klauber Memorial Rattlesnake Website

    78. Cobra Info Page 9 - Feeding Habits
    cobra Information Page 9. cobra's Feeding Habits. Most snakes are carnivorous andeat birds, fish, frogs, lizards and such small animals as rabbits and rats.
    http://www.cobras.org/cob_9.htm
    Cobra Information Page 9
    Cobra's Feeding Habits

    79. Snakes
    Their families includes the Elapidae, (the cobra, the coral snakes andthe death adder). The Viperidae belongs to the family of vipers.
    http://members.tripod.com/~hettiarachchi/snakes.html
    Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated Sri Lanka's venomous snakes and their habitat [Source: The Island] By Aryadasa Ratnasinghe
    According to Sri Lanka National Museum's Manuscript Series (Vol. VIII) and the Sinhala Palm Leaf Manuscripts Medical Vol. IV (Treatment for snake bites), there are five kinds of venomous snakes in Sri Lanka. They are the Mapila (Cat-snake), the Karawala (Krait), the Naya (Cobra), the Tit-polonga (Russell's viper) and the Kunakatuwa (Humped-nose viper). For purpose of identity, they have been described as follows:
    ''The mapila's pupil of the eye is vertical and slit-like, the neck is narrower than the head and the body is usually compressed. The row of scales along the top of the back is enlarged, Mapilas are tree-dwelling snakes of which four species are found in Sri Lanka. Some are light-brown, others are dark-brown or light-red, and they either possess dark cross bars or blotches, or lack such markings. They are venomous. ''The karawala is identified by the enlarged row of scales along the top of its back, and by the third upper lip-scale touching the nasal-scale and the eye. It is black in colour with a series of white rings that disappear with age. They are highly venomous.

    80. Graphic Express Mustang Cobra With Snakes Windshield Decal
    N063 'cobra with snakes' windshield decal Colors White, Red, Blue,Yellow, Silver or Gold Metallic. Custom Colors Available Size
    http://www.graphic-express.com/N063.htm

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    INFO Policy Page Returns/Damage Autho rization Form ... Office Installation Facility Free Decal Offer 'Cobra with Snakes' windshield decal Colors: White, Red, Blue, Yellow, Silver or Gold Metallic. Custom Colors Available Size 4"X35" long Decals apply to outside of glass. Custom Decals Available. Standard $29.95 each #N063-R Reflective $34.95 each #N 'Cobra' windshield decal Colors: White, Red, Blue, Yellow, Silver or Gold Metallic.

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