Boiga trigonata

Indian gamma snake
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Colubridae
Subfamily: Colubrinae
Genus: Boiga
Species: B. trigonata
Binomial name
Boiga trigonata
(Schneider, 1802)
Synonyms

Coluber trigonatus Schneider, 1802
Dipsas trigonata Boie, 1827
Dipsadomorphus trigonatus Günther, 1858

The Indian gamma Snake or common cat snake (Boiga trigonata) is a species of rear-fanged colubrid found in South Asia.

Contents

Description

See snake scales for terms used

B. trigonata has anterior palatine and mandibular teeth scarcely larger than the posterior. Its eyes are as long as the distance from its nostril; the rostral is broader than deep with the internasal scales shorter than the prefrontal scales. The frontal scales are longer than their distance from the end of the snout and shorter than the parietal scales. The loreals are as long as they are deep, or, they can be deeper than they are long. B. trigonata's one preocular does not extend to the upper surface of the head. The species has two postoculars, temporals 2+3, and 8 upper labials, with the third, fourth, and fifth entering the eye. They can have 4 or 5 lower labials in contact with the anterior chin-shields, which are about as long as the posterior. B. trigonata's body is moderately compressed with scales in 21 (or rarely 19) rows, disposed obliquely, with the vertebrals very feebly enlarged. There are 229-269 ventral scales, 79-92 subcaudul scales, and a single anal scale.

B. trigonata has a yellowish-olive or pale grey colour along the back and a white black-edged zigzag band along the length of the head with two brown bands edged with black, diverging posteriorly. The belly is white and can have a series of small brown spots along each side. The total length is around 3 feet (91 cm) with a 7 inch (18 cm) tail.[1]

B. trigonata is found in the Perso-Baluchistan frontier.

Distribution

It is distributed throughout Sri Lanka, India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Afghanistan (Leviton 1959: 461), southern Turkmenistan, southern Uzbekistan, southeastern Tajikistan, and Iran. The race melanocephala is found in Pakistan; this form is variously considered as a subspecies, color variant, or full species.

Notes

  1. ^ Boulenger, G. A. 1890. Fauna of British India. Reptilia and Batrachia.

References

External links