| A great variety of snakes live in the
park, but because of the dense cover and their own shyness
they are rarely seen They usually keep out of man’s
way: as they pick up vibrations transmitted through
the ground, they move off before any approaching human
comes into sight. In winter, when most tourists visit
Chitwan, they hibernate, and during the period of greatest
activity - the monsoon - there are no visitors around
to see them.
KING COBRA (Ophiophagus hannah)
This largest of all the world’s poisonous snakes
has been known to reach a length 5 m, although the average
is 3-4 m. Young king cobras have yellow-to-white bands
on a black skin, but large animals gradually lose the
bands and become uniformly dark olivaceous black or
brown. King Cobras are not nearly as aggressive as many
books make them out to be, but a bite from one may result
in death from cardiac failure and respiratory arrest.
COMMON COBRA (Naja naja)
This snake is seen more often around the villages than
in the park. Usually black to light-yellowish it gives
a spectacular warning display by expanding its neck
ribs to form a wide hood, with or without marking. This
shy snake will usually flee when disturbed, rather than
attack. Its venom is neurotoxic, which means that it
attacks the nervous system. Most cobra bites are not
fatal to man but may cause tissue damage to the bitten
park. Defanged cobras are maintained as pets for local
entertainment by Indian snake- charmers.
COMMON KRAIT (Bungarus caeruleus)
Of all the poisonous snakes in Chitwan, the common
krait has the most potent venom. The kraits average
3 feet, and are generally colored black with a shiny,
steel-blue tinge interrupted by thin white crossbands
which may be broken or indistinct towards the front.
They feed on other snakes, including their own kind,
and also on rodents. Hiding in burrows and crevices
by day, these night-hunters are more numerous outside
the park than inside, but it is a lethargic snake and
is not common.
INDIAN PYTHON (Python molorus)
This is by far the largest snake in the park. Although
the specimens recorded in Chitwan are smaller, lengths
of up to 5.85 m have been recorded elsewhere. In Chitwan
a 14-foot specimen was seen and photographed swallowing
a whole hog deer, whose body had a diameter of at least
a foot and weighed some 60 lb. But another snake, 17
feet long, was found dead, having killed itself trying
to swallow an even bigger hog deer. The pythons ability
to swallow such enormous lumps of food derives from
the structure of its jaw, which are connected to each
other by tough, elastic muscles, and can separate widely.
Inhabitants of sal and riverine forest, pythons catch
prey by striking with their fangs, then squeezing the
victim with their coils until it suffocates. Although
their colors are bold - black, yellow and white - they
blend to give surprisingly good camouflage. Infra-red-sensitive
pits on their mouth-margins give them the capacity to
hunt in darkness.
BRONZEBACK TREE SNAKE (Dendrelaphis tristis)
This is a arboreal snake, hunts during the day for
lizards, tree frogs and small birds and spends a lot
of its time on trees often jumping from branch to branch.
It has a purplish-brown back and yellow belly. When
exited, the bronzeback will expand its neck, revealing
a blue color between the scales.
Other snakes reported in the park include the Indian
egg-eater (Elachistodon westormanni), the common smooth
water snake (Enhydris enhydris), Siebold’s smooth
water snake (Enhydris sieboldi), and the red-necked
keel-back (Rhabdophis subminiata).
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