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Pit Viper is an American company based in South Salt Lake, Utah. The company designs, develops and manufactures sports performance equipment and lifestyle pieces including sunglasses , safety glasses, eyeglasses , sports visors, ski/snowboard goggles utilizing a 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s aesthetic combined with an irreverent, absurdist ...
Trimeresurus sabahi, commonly known as the Sabah pit viper [1] or Sabah bamboo pitviper, [3] [4] is a venomous pitviper species. [3] If defined narrowly, it is endemic to the island of Borneo. [1] If defined more broadly, it consists of five subspecies found in Southeast Asia. [3]
Mixcoatlus browni (commonly known as Brown's montane pit viper, [1] [2] sometimes Mexican montane pitviper [3]) is a species of pit viper found at high elevations in Guerrero, Mexico. This species was previously placed in the genus Agkistrodon , where it was considered to be a junior synonym of Cerrophidion barbouri .
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Trimeresurus mayaae also commonly known as Maya's pit viper is a species of venomous pit viper endemic to ...
The last new species of (green) pit viper was described from India 70 years before the discovery of T. arunachalensis. Genetic analysis indicates that the closest relative of this species is the Tibetan bamboo pit viper (T. tibetanus). The single specimen known of this species makes it one of the rarest known pit vipers in the world, though ...
Trimeresurus andersonii is a venomous pitviper species [1] endemic to the Andaman Islands of India. Common names include: Nicobar mangrove pit viper , [ 3 ] Anderson's pitviper , [ 4 ] and Andaman pit viper .
Trimeresurus septentrionalis, commonly known as the Nepal pit viper or northern white-lipped pit viper, [3] is a venomous pit viper species found in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal and India. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] Description
Cerrophidion is a genus of pit vipers which are endemic to southern Mexico, Central America, and western Panama. [1] The generic name, Cerrophidion, is derived from the Spanish word cerro, which means "mountain", and the Greek word ophidion, which means "small snake". [2] Five species are recognized as being valid, but no subspecies are. [3]