Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Blue bellied black snake

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Kingdom
  
Class
  
Reptilia

Suborder
  
Serpentes

Scientific name
  
Pseudechis guttatus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Family
  
Rank
  
Species

Blue-bellied black snake wwwsnakecatchercomimagesbluebellied2ljpg

Similar
  
Collett's snake, Tropidechis carinatus, Pseudechis, Pseudechis papuanus, Bandy‑bandy

Blue bellied black snake top 5 facts


Pseudechis guttatus (the blue-bellied black snake or spotted black snake) is a species of black snake that is only found in the inland areas of south-eastern Queensland and northern New South Wales. On average, their measurement is 1.25 m, but some snakes have been found to measure as long as 2 m. Their diet consists of frogs, lizards, and small mammals, therefore making them carnivorous. They, like most other snakes, are oviparous, laying 7–12 eggs during their breeding season. It is unknown what their average venom ejection is. When mice are bitten, the snake's venom is the most toxic of all the black snakes. They are naturally very shy, and will not bite unless provoked (by being stepped on by a boot, prodded by a stick, etc.). If a human is bitten, they may suffer severe pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, diaphoresis and regional lymphadenopathy at the location of the bite, similar to a red-bellied black snake's bite symptoms. Bites are infrequent. If bitten, tiger snake antivenom is the preferred treatment.

Blue-bellied black snake Bluebellied Black Snake Pseudechis guttatus Australian Museum
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Blue-bellied black snake Geoff Jacobs gt Snake Catcher gt Identify Australian Snakes gt Blue

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References

Blue-bellied black snake Wikipedia


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