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  2. Anaconda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaconda

    The description of its habit was based on Andreas Cleyer, who in 1684 described a gigantic snake that crushed large animals by coiling around their bodies and crushing their bones. [8] Henry Yule in his 1886 work Hobson-Jobson , notes that the word became more popular due to a piece of fiction published in 1768 in the Scots Magazine by a ...

  3. Bandy-bandy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandy-bandy

    The bandy-bandy is a smooth-scaled, glossy snake with a distinctive pattern of sharply contrasting black and white rings that continue right around the body. Bandy-bandys are strikingly distinguishable from other Australian land snakes by their unique banding pattern, [ 3 ] which gives the species both its common names and its scientific name ...

  4. Sidewinding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidewinding

    Sidewinding in a newborn sidewinder rattlesnake. Yellow regions are lifted above the sand and in motion at the time of the photo, while green regions are in static contact with the sand. Blue denotes tracks. Scale imprints are visible in the tracks, showing that the snake's body is static during ground contact. Tracks of a sidewinder in the sand.

  5. Flying and gliding animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_and_gliding_animals

    Similar adaptations to Ptychozoon are found in the two species of the gecko genus Cosymbotus. Chrysopelea snakes. Five species of snake from Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and India. The paradise tree snake of southern Thailand, Malaysia, Borneo, Philippines, and Sulawesi is the most capable glider of those snakes studied. It glides by stretching ...

  6. Desert kingsnake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert_kingsnake

    The snake's glossy dorsum is black or very dark brown colored, finely speckled with off-white or yellow. These pale flecks form dimly defined narrow vertebral crossbands, between which the intervening rectangular areas are black. Pale yellow scales may predominate along the lower sides.

  7. Concertina movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concertina_movement

    Concertina movement is the method by which a snake or other organism anchors itself with sections of itself and pulls or pushes with other sections to move in the direction it wants to go. To spring forward a snake may require a rough surface to thrust back against. [1] [2] It is named after the concertina musical instrument. [citation needed]

  8. Children's python - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children's_python

    Children's python (Antaresia childreni) is a species of nonvenomous snake in the family Pythonidae.The species is named after John George Children.It is a nocturnal species occurring in the northern half of Australia and generally found on the ground, although it often climbs trees.

  9. Chrysopelea paradisi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysopelea_paradisi

    Paradise tree snake or paradise flying snake (Chrysopelea paradisi) is a species of colubrid snake found in Southeast Asia. It can, like all species of its genus Chrysopelea , glide by stretching the body into a flattened strip using its ribs.