Bailey's snake | |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Subphylum: | Vertebrata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Suborder: | Serpentes |
Family: | Colubridae |
Subfamily: | incertae sedis |
Genus: | Thermophis |
Species: | T. baileyi |
Binomial name | |
Thermophis baileyi (Wall, 1907) |
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Synonyms | |
Thermophis baileyi, also known as "Bailey's snake" or the "hot-spring keel-back"[3], is a rare species of colubrid snake.
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It is found only at high altitudes (14,000 feet = 4,267 m) in the mountains of Tibet near two hot springs.[4][5][6]
Thermophis baileyi is olive green, with five series of indistinct spots dorsally, most pronounced in the forebody. It has a dusky postocular streak, and dusky posterior edges to the labials. The belly is bluish-grey, with each ventral black basally. The young are darker than adults.
Dorsal scales in 19 rows, all keeled except last row, with indistinct double apical facets. Ventrals 201-221; anal divided; subcaudals 91-111, mostly divided, but with a few entire.
Adults may attain a total length of 2 feet 6 inches (76 cm).[4]
Bailey's snake is on the endangered species list.[7][8][9]
The existence of Bailey's snake was first announced in the scientific literature in 1907, when it was described as a new species by Frank Wall.[4][10] Wall originally classified it as Tropodinotus (=Natrix) baileyi, before it was realized that Bailey's snake did not fit in the genus Natrix. In 1953 Malnate placed it in the new genus Thermophis, designating baileyi as the type species.[5]
All specimens found appear to live within about 1 km of a hot spring known as Chutsen Chugang Hot Springs, on the grounds of the Zhoto Terdrom / Tidro Nunnery in Maldrogongkar / Mozhugongka County, near Lhasa in the Tibet Autonomous Region at an altitude of 4350 m. There also has been a report of Bailey's snakes near the Yangpachen/Yangbajain Hot Springs, at about the same altitude in Maldrogongkar County, Tibet Autonomous Region.
This genus of snakes lives at the highest altitude of any snake in the world.[11]