Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hydrophis belcheri, commonly known as the faint-banded sea snake or Belcher's sea snake, is an extremely venomous species of sea snake. It has a timid temperament and would normally have to be subjected to severe mistreatment before biting.
Persian Gulf sea snake H. macdowelli: Kharin, 1983 0 small-headed sea snake, McDowell's sea snake Western Australia: H. major (Shaw, 1802) 0 greater sea snake, olive-headed sea snake H. mamillaris (Daudin, 1803) 0 Bombay sea snake H. melanocephalus: Gray, 1849 0 slender-necked sea snake H. melanosoma: Günther, 1864 0 black-banded robust sea snake
Hydrophis fasciatus (Striped sea snake) Hydrophis gracilis (Graceful small-headed sea snake, slender sea snake) Hydrophis inornatus (Plain sea snake) Hydrophis klossi (Kloss' sea snake) Hydrophis lapemoides (Persian Gulf sea snake) Hydrophis mamillaris (Bombay sea snake) Hydrophis melanocephalus (Slender-necked sea snake) Hydrophis obscurus ...
A hook-nosed sea snake seen on Arossim Beach, South Goa, India. This snake was found in a fishing net and later released to the sea. Hydrophis schistosus, commonly known as the beaked sea snake, hook-nosed sea snake, common sea snake, or the Valakadeyan sea snake, is a highly venomous species of sea snake common throughout the tropical Indo-Pacific.
The yellow-bellied sea snake is the only sea snake to have been found in the Atlantic Ocean, although only in limited circumstances. The yellow-bellied sea snake's occurrence into the Atlantic is not considered a part of its native range, but rather a dispersal from its native Pacific range. [34] Hydrophis platurus xanthos
Hydrophis semperi; Hydrophis sibauensis; Slender-necked sea snake; Small-headed sea snake; Smith's small-headed sea snake; Spectacled sea snake; Spine-bellied sea snake; Hydrophis spiralis; Spotted sea snake; Stokes's sea snake; Hydrophis stricticollis
The olive-headed sea snake (Hydrophis major), also known as the greater sea snake, is a species of venomous sea snake in the family Elapidae. [1] [2] Geographic range
Black-banded sea krait venom is reportedly ten times stronger than that of a cobra; however, as with the vast majority of venomous snake species, the black-banded sea krait generally does not aggressively strike at humans unless it is cornered or threatened (or otherwise maliciously provoked), preferring to conserve its energy and venom supplies for hunting purposes, reacting defensively only ...