Tiger already 3 letters. Tiger snake (Rhabdophis tigrina). Distribution of the tiger snake

The brindle already has some distinctive features related to protection from predators. The reptile has glands on the back of its neck with a special secretion that allow the snake to defend itself from attack. When a predator goes on the attack, the snake deliberately lowers its head so that the enemy bites precisely at these glands. The secretion ends up in the animal's mouth, forcing the snake to release. Such unique feature makes the individuals of the group under discussion the most courageous of their kind. But let's talk about everything in more detail.

Description

  1. Sexual characteristics are distinctive, that is, females are distinguished by their overall characteristics. Male individuals are slightly smaller. There are snakes that grow up to 3.5 meters in length. They are slender in body format, elongated and not too thick. The head is medium, protected by paired shields on both sides.
  2. The pupils are round, but may be oval or cleft-shaped. The tail is not too long; it is 3-5 times shorter than the body. The tail format varies, ranging from abrupt to sharp or rounded. The body is covered with scales, which can stand out or smooth out, it all depends on the individual.
  3. The upper part of the body does not have the color characteristic of absolutely all snakes. Typically, pigmentation varies between greenish and brownish tones. Snakes can be olive, emerald, gray with an ash tint, as well as dark gray and brown-red. There are reddish individuals and pure black ones. The final color can be variegated or plain with or without spots.
  4. The ventral section is pigmented white, more dirty than pure and uniform. In this area, spots or oblong stripes may be visible, located in the middle and extending all the way to the tail. The number of teeth is ambiguous, and there is also no uniform size and format. Mostly the teeth are small and sharp.
  5. Due to the fact that this species has been studied quite thoroughly, experts have been able to establish that there are dense and large teeth on several sides. Also, when a snake swallows food, these same teeth bend, that is, they are mobile against the background of the rest of the fixed row.
  6. The teeth grow from the middle of the jaw to its depth. The largest specimens are located closer to the throat. In some individuals they are located separately from the rest. The tongue is forked, as is the case with all reptiles of this kind.

Danger to humans

  1. Snakes in all their diversity do not cause damage to humans. They do not have the ability to attack; generally, snakes try to avoid people or defend themselves when they approach. Often individuals do not even know how to bite, they only grab and immediately release.
  2. When an individual of the species in question sees an approaching threat, it tries to hide out of sight. If such a maneuver was not possible, the reptile behaves quietly and does not move. He can hiss, jump out in a lunge and do a stance, but this is all feigned.
  3. If a person tries to get closer, the snake will still bite, but it will do it weakly, without much damage. In the worst case, there will be barely noticeable scratches. Let's repeat, this genus The snake is relatively calm and will not attack without warning in the form of a hiss.
  4. The main means of protection is considered to be the liquid ejected from the cloaca, which smells very unpleasant. If a person manages to catch a snake, he will eventually stop resisting, completely relax and open his mouth slightly. The tongue will fall out, and the snake itself will look like a rope.

Habitats

  1. It is worth noting amazing fact that the individuals in question are distributed throughout almost all of Europe and up to the Arctic Circle. Such snakes live in different parts Africa, except in the driest areas and deserts. It is also not uncommon in Central and North America. Snakes are also found in Cuba.
  2. Reptiles are common in Asia, Australia, South America and various islands. Where such individuals are not found, they are replaced by a very closely related genus of cross-eyed snakes. Concerning Russian Federation, then such snakes predominantly inhabit the entire European part.
  3. In general, individuals live in places where there is water and sufficient humidity. Much also depends on the type of reptile. Snakes can be found in mountains, steppes, floodplains, near the sea, ponds, lakes, swamps and similar wet places.
  4. There are quite a lot of snakes that live in arid and sandy places where there is practically no moisture and water. Often individuals prefer to be active precisely in daytime. During the day they bask in the sun, and in the morning and evening they go hunting.
  5. It is worth noting that such snakes are excellent at climbing trees. They can move among the branches without any problems. Snakes spend a lot of time in the water. They love to swim and dive. With all this, snakes can stay in water for a long time and sometimes hunt in such an environment.
  6. Reptiles often swim along the shore without climbing onto land. However, it is not uncommon for such snakes to be spotted several kilometers from the shore in lakes and seas. While swimming, individuals raise their heads above the water. Such snakes swim well underwater and can spend a long time at the bottom.
  7. Some species of snakes are classified as burrowing reptiles. Most often, such snakes live on the forest floor. In case of danger, they hide under stones. Individuals living in arid regions most often burrow into sand and loose soil, heaping it onto themselves. At night, the majority of snakes prefer to hide in their homes.

Tiger snakes are not much different from ordinary ones. The individuals in question have a beautiful appearance and are widely distributed throughout the world. Lead ordinary image life. They hunt during the day and hide in burrows at night.

Video: Tiger snake (Rhabdophis tigrinus)

Long-toothed snakes (Rhabdophis) are snakes from a genus of bright, colorful and extremely interesting reptiles, modest in species diversity, whose distribution area is the mainland zone South-East Asia and adjacent islands. The genus contains about 23-25 ​​species, four of which are found in the Philippines, two inhabit the floodplain forests and lowlands of Sri Lanka and India, four species live in Malaysia

The rest are more widely distributed, but only one species of long-toothed snakes - the tiger snake - extends the northern border of its distribution zone into Russia. This beautiful and very interesting representative of the family in its content and behavior will be discussed in this article.


The tiger snake is a slender snake, reaching more than a meter in length; there have been specimens up to one hundred and thirty centimeters long. External structure head and body are similar to real snakes. Under the skin of the back, behind the head, it has from 10 to 19 pairs of nucho-dorsal glands, visible from the outside by small ridges on the skin.

Scales with pronounced longitudinal ribs. The eyes are large, the pupil is round. In the mouth, the last two maxillary teeth are greatly enlarged, bent back and separated from the remaining teeth by a clear gap.

From total number snake tribe, the tiger snake is one of the most beautiful, and, of course, the most elegant of the species of snakes found in Russia. In terms of beauty and habits, only the dinodons living in the neighborhood and, perhaps, the leopard snakes, which are not very closely related, can compete with it. In nature, snakes are most often found with a color of dark green, dark olive, light brown; Along this background there are usually clearly defined black transverse stripes, sometimes divided into transverse dorsal and lateral spots.

In the front part of the body, in the spaces between the stripes, the edges of the scales are bright red or orange-red. These orange and red spots only appear on adults. On the sides of the head there are two bright black spots: one is located in the temporal region, the other, triangular, connects the lower edge of the eye with the upper jaw. In fairness, it should be noted that sometimes, one might even say rarely, and mostly this is a lucky coincidence, snakes with a blue or black color come across, but this is a very pleasant exception for the finder.

Tiger snakes are widespread in Korea, Eastern China and Japanese islands. In Russia, the habitat is limited only to the Far Eastern region - Primorye and the south Khabarovsk Territory. Here the snake is found in places with a constant level of humidity, preferring to stay near bodies of water, in swamps or in damp lowlands with dense vegetation. Far from bodies of water, it settles in mixed and deciduous forests, as well as in the meadows. It's enough in places like this numerous species; You can find up to fifty specimens in an area of ​​one square kilometer. For the winter, it goes into short-term hibernation, hiding in rodent burrows, in small crevices, under stones, snags, fallen trees, or in vast underground chambers that serve for the collective wintering of Far Eastern snakes.

When meeting a person, a tiger snake tries to quickly crawl away, but if this fails and the snake senses danger, it vertically raises the front part of its body, while its neck becomes flat, like a cobra’s unfurling its hood. The defender hisses and lunges towards the enemy. The nucho-dorsal glands secrete a caustic secretion, which, when it gets into the mouth of a predator who has carelessly grabbed a tiger snake, forces it to immediately release the prey.

On occasion, a tiger snake can itself bite an enemy. Its saliva is poisonous, but its short teeth usually do not bite deep enough into the human body for the poison to enter the bloodstream.

However, if the grass snake manages to bite with its long back teeth, located deeply, severe poisoning can occur, accompanied by the same symptoms as with a viper bite. This family of snakes does not have true, that is, phylogenetically derived from the upper jaw, venom glands, but in the process of evolution they acquired the Duvernois gland, anatomically developed from salivary gland. The secretion of this gland also has a poisonous effect, but less pronounced than that of other types of snakes.

1. The snake belongs to the family of long-toothed snakes, which have toxic saliva and two enlarged teeth hidden in the depths of the mouth; when bitten, the body can be poisoned, similar to the effect of the venom of vipers.

2. This snake is similar in its biology and conditions of detention to real snakes, only its temperature should be slightly higher (28-30°C). Like common grass snake, the tiger breeds easily in captivity; wintering, although desirable, is not required.

Depending on the duration and timing of wintering, the mating dates can be shifted to any month of the year, but usually it is February-March. The duration of pregnancy is 48 days. The second clutch from snakes can be obtained in June-July. The number of eggs in clutches ranges from 8 to 22, their dimensions are usually 27-35 mm x 16-20 mm, with a weight of about 20 g. The duration of incubation of eggs at a temperature of 27-30 ° C and 90% humidity is 34-38 days . The young hatch with a body length of 150-200 mm. Their first molt occurs a week after birth. The young grow quickly and at one year of age begin to show signs of sexual activity, and at 18 months they become sexually mature.

Like the common snake, the tiger snake is a real “frog-eater”; it feeds mainly on black-spotted and Far Eastern frogs, as well as toads and other tailless amphibians. However, it can also eat fish.

Snakes should be fed separately, since when kept together, cases of “fights” over feed object, and since snakes overtake and grab prey in a quick rush, it may well happen that, along with the frog, the hungrier tiger snake will begin to swallow its fellow tribesmen.

Having grabbed a toad, frog or other small animal, it begins to chew, as it were, the part of the victim’s body captured in its mouth, trying to put its enlarged poisonous teeth into action. Tiger snakes are quite voracious snakes, so when feeding them, it is best to " Golden Rule": it is better to underfeed than to overfeed, especially since in nature, unlike in terrarium keeping, the snake does not complete every hunt successfully.

Therefore, it is quite advisable for a pet to follow a kind of diet: during the period of intensive growth of snakes, up to about six months, they should be fed more often - 2-3 times a week; after seven months, two or three feedings per month are quite enough, and it is advisable to give them along with feed vitamin preparations and calcium supplements, a wide selection of which is available in pet stores. Vitamins and mineral supplements from TETRA have proven themselves very well, they include a complete balanced complex of substances and minerals necessary for the animal’s body.

The tiger snake is a medium-sized snake, quite unpretentious in maintenance, therefore, when kept, it may well be content with a horizontal type of medium-sized terrarium; it is advisable to arrange several secluded shelters, a small pool and several branches for climbing. Plants are desirable, but not required; in order to avoid breakage of stems or leaves, it is best to use plant species with strong stems and leaves, or creeping species - mosses, tradescantia, philodendrons, bromeliads.

It is very good for decorative design to plant part of the pool aquatic plants- salvinia, riccia, and some other floating species. In general, the arrangement of a terrarium for your pet, its interior design is a matter of taste for the owner, but we must not forget that the main thing is the combination of beauty in the design and comfortable living of the animal, since “we are responsible for those we have tamed.”

The tiger snake is a “conditionally poisonous” snake

The tiger snake belongs to the group of “conditionally poisonous” snakes, that is, its poisonous teeth are located not in front, but deep in the mouth. Unlike many others poisonous snakes(vipers, copperheads, etc.), the poisonous teeth of the tiger snake are located behind, at the rear edges of the upper jaw and are separated from the others by a toothless gap.

Therefore, a bite with these teeth is not always applied even in the case of successful throws on the enemy. Since the teeth are located deep in the mouth on the posterior edge of the maxillary bone, the tiger snake can only bite the victim in the mouth. All this must be taken into account by terrariumists. Snakes typically feed on lizards and frogs, injecting them with poison as they ingest them. Although tiger snakes do not pose a direct danger to humans, since a normal bite uses only the non-venomous teeth located in front, if a bite with poisonous teeth does occur, typical snake venom poisoning occurs, sometimes with fatal consequences.

For a long time This snake in Russia was, and is still considered, non-venomous, since the snake is extremely calm and friendly, even during feeding, having entered into the excitement of the hunt, it perfectly sees and understands what can be eaten and what cannot, and does not try to attack a person’s hand.

However, it should be noted that in Japan, statistics on poisoning by its poison have been kept for a long time, and it is known deaths, therefore, when keeping a tiger snake in an apartment, you should not forget that it is some kind of snake, but still a snake with its own complexes and reflexes inherent in nature. Therefore, do not try to train her, but accept her for who she is, and she will give you many pleasant moments of rest and relaxation after a busy day at work.

Photo by Vladimir Mikheev

Description

This is a slender snake, reaching a meter in length, with a physique similar to real snakes. Under the skin of the back, behind the head, it has from 10 to 19 pairs of nucho-dorsal glands, visible from the outside by small ridges on the skin. Scales with pronounced longitudinal ribs. The eyes are large, the pupil is round. In the mouth, the last two maxillary teeth are greatly enlarged, bent back and separated from the remaining teeth by a clear gap. The tiger snake is one of the most beautiful, and, of course, the most elegant of the species of snakes found in Russia. The upper side of its body is dark green, dark olive, light brown, blue or almost black, but most often bright green. This background usually has clearly defined black transverse stripes, sometimes divided into transverse dorsal and lateral spots. In the anterior part of the body, the edges of the scales in the spaces between the stripes are bright red or orange-red. These orange and red spots only appear on adults. On the sides of the head there are two bright black spots: one is located in the temporal region, the other, triangular, connects the lower edge of the eye with the upper jaw. The eyes are large and black.

The tiger snake is common in Korea, Eastern China and the Japanese Islands. In Russia, it is found only in Primorye and in the south of the Khabarovsk Territory. This snake loves moist habitats. It lives near bodies of water, in swamps or in damp lowlands with dense vegetation. Far from water bodies, it settles in mixed and deciduous forests, as well as in meadows. In such places the species is already quite numerous; encountered up to 44 specimens along a permanent three-kilometer route.

For the winter, it takes refuge in rodent burrows or in vast underground chambers that serve for the collective wintering of Far Eastern snakes.

In case of danger, it vertically raises the front part of the body. At the same time, his neck becomes flat, like that of a cobra unfolding its hood. The defender hisses and lunges towards the enemy. The nucho-dorsal glands secrete a caustic secretion, which, when it gets into the mouth of a predator who has carelessly grabbed a tiger snake, forces it to immediately release the prey. On occasion, a tiger snake can itself bite an enemy. Its saliva is poisonous, but its short teeth usually do not bite deep enough into the human body for the poison to enter the bloodstream. However, if the grass snake manages to bite with its long back teeth, located deeply, severe poisoning can occur, accompanied by the same symptoms as with a viper bite.

This snake is similar in its biology and conditions of detention to real snakes, only its temperature should be slightly higher (28-30°C). Like the common snake, the tiger snake easily reproduces in captivity; wintering, although desirable, is not required. Depending on the duration and timing of wintering, the mating dates can be shifted to any month of the year, but usually it is February-March. The duration of pregnancy is 48 days. The second clutch from snakes can be obtained in June-July. The number of eggs in clutches ranges from 8 to 22, their dimensions are usually 27-35 mm x 16-20 mm, with a weight of about 20 g. The duration of incubation of eggs at a temperature of 27-30 ° C and 90% humidity is 34-38 days. The young hatch with a body length of 150-200 mm. Their first molt occurs a week after birth. The young grow quickly and at one year of age begin to show signs of sexual activity, and at 18 months they become sexually mature.

Like the common snake, the tiger snake is a true “frog-eater”; it feeds mainly on black-spotted and Far Eastern frogs, as well as toads and other tailless amphibians. However, it can also eat fish.

The tiger snake is a “conditionally poisonous” snake

The tiger snake belongs to the group of “conditionally poisonous” snakes, that is, its poisonous teeth are located not in front, but deep in the mouth. Unlike many other poisonous snakes (vipers, copperheads, etc.), the poisonous teeth of the tiger snake are located behind - at the rear edges of the upper jaw and are separated from the others by a toothless gap. Therefore, a bite with these teeth is not always applied even in the case of successful throws on the enemy. Since the teeth are located deep in the mouth on the posterior edge of the maxillary bone, the Tiger Snake can only bite the victim that is in the mouth. All this should be taken into account by beginning terrariumists. They feed, as a rule, on lizards and frogs, injecting poison into them during ingestion. Although tiger snakes do not pose a direct danger to people, since a normal bite uses non-venomous teeth located in the front. However, if a bite by poisonous teeth does occur, typical poisoning with snake venom occurs, sometimes with fatal outcome. For a long time this snake in Russia was considered non-venomous. However, in Japan, statistics on poisoning by its poison have been kept for a long time, and deaths are known.

According to their own anatomical features(structure of the skull and venom-bearing apparatus) Tiger snakes belong to the posterior grooved snakes, that is, they have teeth that increase in size towards the pharynx, in other words, large teeth are located in the depths of the mouth. When biting, retrosulcated snakes seem to chew the victim. This family of snakes does not have true, that is, phylogenetically derived from the upper jaw, venom glands, but have the Duvernois gland, anatomically developed from the salivary gland. The secretion of this gland also has a poisonous effect, but less pronounced than that of other types of snakes.

A - Colubridae (Tiger snake), B - Asps, C - Vipers

1 - poisonous gland, 2 - duct of the gland, 3 - poisonous teeth, 4 - drainage cavity of the poisonous tooth, 5 - groove for the drainage of poison, 6 - channel of the poisonous tooth

International scientific name

Rhabdophis tigrinus ( , )

Subspecies
  • Rhabdophis tigrinus tigrinus (Boie, 1826)
  • Rhabdophis tigrinus formosanus(Maki, 1931)

Description

Appearance

A snake with a bright color - the upper side of the body is green with dark stripes. On the neck and front of the body green color changes to red-orange, which resembles the coloration. Body length - up to 110 cm.

Distribution and habitat

Extended to Far East Russia, as well as in neighboring countries. Inhabits damp biotopes, near water bodies, both in forests and outside them.

Behavior

In defense, the tiger snake takes a characteristic pose: it raises the front part of its body almost vertically, hisses, and lunges towards the enemy. A caustic secretion is secreted from the nucho-dorsal glands located on the upper side of the neck, which forces the predator that has grabbed the tiger snake to immediately release it. This secretion contains polyhydroxylated ones, similar in structure to cardiotonic ones from toad venom.

Nutrition

Tiger snake and man

Poisoning from a bite

There is a known case in which a 50-year-old man was bitten by a tiger snake and was poisoned. Symptoms: bleeding from the wound, increased... Treatment for a tiger snake bite.

Kept in approximately the same conditions as, only at slightly higher high temperature(28-30 °C). They reproduce easily in captivity, producing up to two clutches per year. To stimulate reproduction, artificial wintering is desirable.

Literature

  • Kudryavtsev S.V. Frolov V.E. Korolev A.V. Terrarium and its inhabitants. - M.: Forestry industry, 1991. - P. 319-322.
  • Orlov B. N. Gelashvili D. B. Ibragimov A. K. Poisonous animals and plants of the USSR - M.: graduate School, 1990. - P. 122. -


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