- Bungarus fasciatus
Taxobox
name = Banded Krait
image_width = 300px
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
subphylum = Vertebrata
classis = Reptilia
ordo =Squamata
subordo =Serpentes
familia =Elapidae
genus = "Bungarus "
species = "B. fasciatus"
binomial = "Bungarus fasciatus"
binomial_authority = Schneider, 1801"Bungarus fasciatus" a venomous elapid
snake species found inIndia andSoutheast Asia . It is commonly called the Banded Krait.Range
The banded krait occurs in the whole of the Indo-Chinese subregion, the Malaysian peninsula and archipelago and Southern China. Smith, Malcolm A. Fauna of British India...Vol III - Serpentes, pages 411 to 413]
It has been recorded from northeast
India throughMyanmar ,Cambodia ,Thailand ,Laos ,Vietnam and southernChina toMalaysia and the mainIndonesia n islands ofBorneo (Java andSumatra ), as well asSingapore .In India, it is generally found in the North-East. It has been recorded in
Bihar andOrissa and as far south and west as Hyderabad,Awadh , the Godavari andMahanadi valleys. In Maharashtra it is found in Chandrapur & Gadchiroli districts. [cite book
last=Khaire
first=NeelimKumar
title=Snakes of Maharashtra, Goa and Karnataka
origyear=2006
edition=
year=2008
publisher=Indian Herpetological Society
location=Pune
oclc=
doi=
id=
pages=p 40]tatus
Not uncommon in Assam and Bangladesh but becomes progressively uncommon westwards in India.Daniels, J.C. (2002), Book of Indian Reptiles and Amphibians pages 134-135.]
Habitat
Banded
krait s may be seen in a variety of habitats ranging fromforest s to agricultural lands. They inhabittermite mounds androdent holes close to water, and often live near human settlement, especially villages because of their supply of rodents and water. They prefer the open plains of the countryside.The banded
krait has been found inMyanmar up to an altitude of 5000 feet.Description
"B. fasciatus" is easily identified by its alternate black and yellow bands, its triangular body cross-section and the marked vertebral ridge consisting of enlarged vertebral shields along its body. The head is broad and depressed. The eye is black. It has arrow-head like yellow markings on its otherwise black head and has yellow lips, lore, chin and throat.
The banded krait has been recorded to grow up to a length of 2125mm, but normally the maximum length encountered is 1800mm or less.
The snake has an entire anal scale and single subcaudals. The tail is small and ends like a finger-tip, generally being one tenth the length of the snake. Boulenger, George A., (1890), The Fauna of British India including Ceylon and Burma, Reptilia and Batrachia. page 388. ]
Photos of identification features
Behaviour
Though venomous the banded krait is a shy snake, not typically seen, and is mainly nocturnal. When harassed they will usually hide their head under their coils, and do not generally attempt to bite, though at night they are much more active and widely considered to be more dangerous then.
During the day they lie up in grass, pits or drains. The snakes are lethargic and sluggish even under provocation. They are most commonly seen in the rains.
Food
The banded krait feeds mainly on other snakes, but is also known to eat fish, frogs, skinks and snake eggs. Among the snakes taken by banded kraits are: -
* Chequered keelback "Xenochrophis piscator ".
* Buff-striped keelback "Amphiesma stolatum ".
* Rat snake or Dhaman "Ptyas mucosus ".
* Indo-Chinese Rat snake "Ptyas korros ".
* Cat snake "Boiga trigonata ".The prey is swallowed head first, after it has been rendered inactive by the venom.
Breeding habits
Little is known of its breeding habits. In
Myanmar a female has been dug out while incubating a clutch of 8 eggs, four of which hatched in May. Young have been recorded to measure 298 to 311mm on hatching. The snake is believed to become adult in the third year of its life and of approximate length 914mm by then. Evans, G.H. (1906):Breeding of the banded krait ("Bungarus fasciatus") in Burma. J. Bombay nat. Hist. Soc. 16:519-520 as mentioned in Daniels, J.C. (2002), Book of Indian Reptiles and Amphibians References, ser no 28, pg 219. ]Venom
"B. fasciatus" venom is
neurotoxic and has been estimated by Col.Frank Wall in 1911 to be 7 to 14 times more potent thancobra venom. There are no authenticated records of human beings having been bitten. Abullock was reported to have died within 20 minutes of being bitten.The polyvalent
antivenin , developed by Alan Van Dyke and available inIndia , is not meant to be used with this snake. No specific antivenin is available for this snake.Photo gallery
Common names
*
Hindi - "raaj saamp".
* Bengali - "sankni", "shankhamooti shaanp".
* Oriya - "rana".
* Telugu - "Bungarum paamu" meaning the golden snake. The scientific name of the genus is also derived from the Telugu word "bungarum" meaning "gold", this being an allusion to the yellow rings around its body.
* Thai - "ngu sam liam", meaning the triangular snake.
*Marathi - "patteri manyar".In Literature
* Venom from a banded krait saved Baby Saleem from Cholera in Salman Rushdie's book, "Midnight's Children".
* Also, Ronald Rosenblatt of the on-line "Fortean Explorer" has suggested that the "swamp adder" mentioned in
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 's "The Adventure of the Speckled Band " might actually be a semi-fictionalized depiction of the banded krait.Notes
References
* Boulenger, George A., (1890), The Fauna of British India including Ceylon and Burma, Reptilia and Batrachia. Taylor and Francis, London.
* Daniels, J.C. (2002), Book of Indian Reptiles and Amphibians. BNHS. Oxford University Press. Mumbai.
* Smith, Malcolm A. (1943), The Fauna of British India, Ceylon and Burma including the whole of the Indo-Chinese Sub-region, Reptilia and Amphibia. Vol I - Loricata and Testudines, Vol II-Sauria, Vol III-Serpentes. Taylor and Francis, London.
* Whitaker, Romulus. (2002), Common Indian Snakes: A Field Guide. Macmillan India Limited, ISBN 0-333-90198-3.External links
*
* Integrated Taxonomic Information System - [http://www.itis.usda.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=700459 Bungarus fasciatus]
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