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Kerilia jerdonii

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Suborder
  
Serpentes

Subfamily
  
Hydrophiinae

Scientific name
  
Kerilia jerdonii

Higher classification
  
Kerilia

Order
  
Scaled reptiles

Subphylum
  
Vertebrata

Family
  
Elapidae

Genus
  
Kerilia Gray, 1849

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Kerilia jerdonii httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Kolpophis annandalei, Thalassophis anomalus, Hydrophis viperinus, Kolpophis, Hydrophis lapemoides

Kerilia jerdonii, commonly known as Jerdon's sea snake, is a species of venomous sea snake in the subfamily Hydrophiinae.

Contents

Etymology

The specific name, jerdonii, is in honor of British zoologist Thomas C. Jerdon.

Description

See snake scales for terms used

M.A. Smith (1943) describes the species as follows: Head short, snout declivous and much narrowed anteriorly; eye moderate; rostral as high as broad; prefrontals small, usually not in contact with the supralabials; frontal much longer than broad, nearly as long as its distance from the end of the snout: 1 pre- and 1 postocular; 6 supralabials, the last often confluent with the single anterior temporal, the 3rd and 4th touching the eye: 7–8 infralabials, the first three in contact with the genitals, both pairs of which are well developed and in contact with one another.

17 [dorsal] scale-rows on the neck. 21 or 23, rarely 19, at mid-body, imbricate and strongly keeled ; Ventrals 225–253 for specimens from the coasts of India and Gulf of Siam; 247-278 for 11 examples from Cap St. Jacques and S. Annam (fide Bourret, p. 25).

Hemipenis forked near the tip; it is spinose throughout, the spines being of moderate size, closely set and becoming slightly larger as they approach the proximal end.

Olive above, yellowish or white beneath, with black dorsal spots or rhombs which extend round the body to form complete bands in the young; intermediate dorsal spots or bars are usually present. Examples from the Bay of Bengal have 19 or 21 scales at mid-body and the dorsal bars number from 30 to 38 (typical form). Examples from the Gulf of Siam have usually 21 or 23 scales at mid-body and the dorsal bars number from 34 (K. j. siamensis).

Total length: 1 m (3.3 ft), tail 10 cm (3.9 in).

Distribution

Indian Ocean (Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, India, Myanmar (Burma), Mergui Archipelago), Coast of Taiwan (China), South China Sea Bay of Bengal (to Sri Lanka), along coasts of W Malaysia to Gulf of Thailand, Gulf of Siam, Indonesia (Borneo).

Race siamensis: Gulf of Thailand.

Type locality: Madras, India.

References

Kerilia jerdonii Wikipedia