Neha Patil (Editor)

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Suborder
  
Serpentes

Subfamily
  
Viperinae

Scientific name
  
Bitis gabonica rhinoceros

Higher classification
  
Gaboon viper

Order
  
Scaled reptiles

Subphylum
  
Vertebrata

Family
  
Viperidae

Genus
  
Bitis

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Subspecies

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros Gaboon Viper Bitis gabonica rhinoceros

Similar
  
Gaboon viper, Bitis, Snake, Vipers, Reptile

Venom extraction from large gaboon vipers bitis gabonica rhinoceros


Bitis gabonica rhinoceros is a venomous viper subspecies endemic to West Africa. It is distinguished from the nominate subspecies, B. g. gabonica, primarily by the presence of a set of large nasal "horns".

Contents

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Description

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros FileBitis gabonica rhinoceros 6jpg Wikimedia Commons

B. g. rhinoceros has a distinctive set of enlarged nasal scales that look like a pair of horns on its nose. This is a characteristic that it shares with a close relative, B. nasicornis. However, B. nasicornis has a brighter color pattern and a narrower head. B. g. gabonica has no such enlarged nasal "horns", and is overall somewhat smaller than B. g. rhinoceros. Also, in B. g. gabonica, the dark triangular marking leading back from the eye towards the angle of the mouth is divided. In B. g. rhinoceros it is not.

Geographic range

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros Gaboon viper Wikipedia

B. g. rhinoceros is found in West Africa from Ghana west to Guinea, including Sierra Leone, Liberia and Ivory Coast. Togo is also mentioned.

According to Spawls & Branch (1995), Ghana and Togo are at the eastern limit of the range of this subspecies, and they begin to intergrade here with B. g. gabonica. The distribution map they provide indicates that the general range for B. g. rhinoceros does not include Togo, but that there has been at least one report of a specimen found there. Togo, together with Benin and at least eastern Ghana, are part of a larger region known as the Dahomey Gap; a relatively dry region that separates the rainforests of West Africa from those of Central Africa.

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros FileBitis gabonica rhinoceros MNHNjpg Wikimedia Commons

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros FileBitis gabonica rhinoceros 1jpg Wikimedia Commons

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros InkShuffle Gaboon viper Bitis gabonica rhinoceros

References

Bitis gabonica rhinoceros Wikipedia