The spine-bellied sea snake (Hydrophis hardwickii ), also commonly known as Hardwicke's sea snake and Hardwicke's spine-bellied sea snake, is a species of venomous elapid sea snake.
The specific name, hardwickii, is in honor of English naturalist Thomas Hardwicke.
Body short, stout, neck region not less than half as thick at midbody;head large; scales squarish or hexagonal, juxtaposed, outer 3-4 rows larger than others, scale rows: males 23-31 around neck, females 27-35, around midbody, males 25-27, females 33-41;ventrals small, usually distinct anteriorly, not so posteriorly, in males 114-186, in females 141-230; head shields entire, parietals occasionally divided;nostrils superior, nasals in contact with one another;prefrontal usually in contact with second upper labial;7-8 upper labials, 3-4 bordering eye; 1 pre- and 1-2 postoculars; 2, rarely 3, anterior temporals; greenish or yellow- olive above, whitish below, 35-50 olive to dark gray dorsal bars, tapering to a point laterally, occasionally encircling body, a narrow dark ventral stripe or broad irregular band occasionally present;adults often lack any pattern and are uniform olive to dark gray;head pale olive to black, yellow markings on snout present or not. Total length 860 mm (2' 4"), tail length 85 mm (3.3").This species is located in warm waters:
Persian Gulf (United Arab Emirates, Iran)Indian Ocean (Bangladesh, Burma, Pakistan ?, Sri Lanka, India)South China Sea north to the coasts of Fujian and ShandongStrait of TaiwanIndoaustralian ArchipelagoNorth coast of Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland, Western Australia)the Philippines (Panay etc.)Pacific Ocean (Thailand, Indonesia, China, Japan, Papua New Guinea)hardwickii: Burma, southeast coast of India and the Straits of Malacca, east to Australia and north to China, Philippines, Taiwan, and Japan.