Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The relationship between India and Indonesia is warm and cordial since the beginning. India and Indonesia established diplomatic relations on 16 April 1949. [1] India recognized Indonesia's independence on 2 September 1946. [2] Both countries are neighbours, India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands share a maritime border with Indonesia along the ...
Gunther's vine snake Ahaetulla dispar Southwest India; Green vine snake Ahaetulla nasuta India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Indo-China; Oriental green snake Ahaetulla prasina Eastern India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, Indo-China, Malay region
See India–Indonesia relations. India and Indonesia are founding members of Non-Aligned Movement. India had supported Indonesian independence and Nehru had raised the Indonesian question in the United Nations Security Council. Indonesia views India as a "distant-cousin" and fellow fighter against colonialism.
Grypotyphlops acutus, also known as the beaked worm snake, beaked blind snake, or beak-nosed worm snake, is a harmless blind snake species endemic to peninsular India. It is the only species in the genus Grypotyphlops. No subspecies are currently recognized. [3]
India, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, the Philippines, and New Guinea [10] Leptotyphlopidae: Stejneger, 1892 13 slender blind snakes or threadsnakes Africa, western Asia, and the Americas: Typhlopidae: Merrem, 1820 18 long-tailed blind snakes Most tropical and many subtropical regions all over the world Xenotyphlopidae: Vidal, Vences, Branch ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
the Western Ghats, India Platyplectrurus: Günther, 1868 2 the southern Western Ghats, India Pseudoplectrurus: G.A. Boulenger, 1890 1 the Western Ghats, India Plectrurus: A.H.A. Duméril, 1851 3 the Western Ghats, India Rhinophis: Hemprich, 1820 24 Sri Lanka and South India Teretrurus: Beddome, 1886 8 the Western Ghats, India Uropeltis T ...
The taxonomy of the genus Channa is incomplete, and a comprehensive revision of the family has not been performed. A phylogenetic study in 2010 has indicated the likelihood of the existence of undescribed species of channids in Southeast Asia, [4] and a more comprehensive phylogenetic study in 2017 indicated that several undescribed species exist in Asia (as well as an undescribed Parachanna ...