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This snake is often confused with the common krait.
Other species clinically known to cause high mortality rates include the common krait, king cobra, etc.
This is not a common krait.
King cobra, common krait, green pit viper, blind snake and lizards are also found.
Early naturalists have suggested its resemblance to the venomous common krait as an instance of Batesian mimicry.
The Common Krait (Bungarus caeruleus) is a type of snake that is found in the jungles of India.
Other snakes found here include the Indian Cobra, Monocled Cobra, Russell's Viper, and the Common Krait.
Reptiles: Spiny-tailed lizard, monitor lizard, Saw-scaled Viper, Russell's viper, Common Krait.
The common krait feeds primarily on other snakes, including "blind worms" (snakes of the genus Typhlops) and other kraits, and also feeds on small mammals.
The park is home to the rare Monocled Cobra, as well as three of the Big Four - Indian Cobra, Russell's Viper and Common Krait.
On the Indian subcontinent, almost all snakebite deaths have traditionally been attributed to the Big Four, consisting of the Russell's viper, Indian cobra, saw-scaled viper, and the common krait.
These include mahseer and rohu, Mugger crocodile, Indian Rock Python, monitor lizard, Indian Cobra, Common Krait and Oriental Ratsnake.
The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus, also known as Indian krait or blue krait) is a species of genus Bungarus found in the jungles of the Indian subcontinent.
The sanctuary is also harbouring Mammals like panthers, hyenas, wolves, wild dogs, jackals, sloth bear, nilgal, porcupine, langoor, Reptiles like python, cobra, common krait, monitor lizard and Crocodiles.
Chameleon, Common skink, Indian flap shell turtle, Russel's viper, Bamboo pit viper, Common krait, Common vine snake, Kukri snake, Indian bronze back are indicative reptiles.
The commonly found reptiles in the park are Freshwater Crocodile, Monitor Lizard, Indian Chameleon, Common Krait, Indian Rock Python, Cobra and Russell's Viper to name a few.
Due to differences in local knowledge and nomenclature, the krait species found in Sri Lanka (common krait or thel karawala, Ceylon krait or mudu karawala) are also referred to or misidentified as mapila.
Reptiles in the park include the King Cobra, Spectacled Cobra, Russells Viper, Saw-scaled Viper, Common Krait, Indian Rock Python, Rat snake, Vine Snake, Green or Bamboo Pit Viper and Monitor Lizards.
Mortality rates caused by bites from the members of this genus vary from species to species; according to University of Adelaide Department of Toxicology, bites from the banded krait have an untreated mortality rate of 1-10%, while those of the common krait are 70-80%.
The venom is, like that of the Indian krait, a catalyzing enzyme; it causes euphoria and vivid hallucinations, and death is usually due to heart-failure.
The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus, also known as Indian krait or blue krait) is a species of genus Bungarus found in the jungles of the Indian subcontinent.
Mirajkar, K., More, S., Gadag, J. (2005) Isolation and purification of a neurotoxin from Bungaruscaeruleus (common Indian krait) venom: biochemical changes induced by the toxin in rats.
Pancho reached down to her ankle and came up with the glittering blue krait.
Bungarus candidus, commonly known as the Malayan krait or blue krait, is a species of krait, a venomous elapid snake.
In Ben Bova's book The Precipice: The Asteroid Wars, vol.1, the character Pancho Lane has a 35 cm metallic blue krait, named Elly.
The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus, also known as Indian krait or blue krait) is a species of genus Bungarus found in the jungles of the Indian subcontinent.
The Common Krait (Bungarus caeruleus) is a type of snake that is found in the jungles of India.
The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus, also known as Indian krait or blue krait) is a species of genus Bungarus found in the jungles of the Indian subcontinent.