Category: Snakes
Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico in the United States are home to the large, slender, nonvenomous species of kingsnake known as the desert kingsnake. The bodies of desert kingsnakes …
The little, harmless Arabian sand boa is native to Iran’s and the Arabian Peninsula’s sandy deserts. Due to their low maintenance requirements, straightforward enclosure design, and hardiness, Arabian sand …
The tentacled snake has a flat head, is short, thin, and has fangs on its back and tentacles on its face. Tentacle snakes are native to Southeast Asia, where …
A little snake called a viper boa is a native of the moist lowlands, swamps, and forests of New Guinea. These snakes feature triangular heads, blunt faces, and characteristic …
The children’s python is an Australian snake that is small, light brown, and non-venomous. Children’s pythons are easy to maintain due to their tolerance and docility, as well as …
A non-venomous snake with an olive tint and a white belly, the olive python can reach a length of 13 feet. Native to Northern Australia, this ground-dwelling python lives …
The extremely poisonous but quiet, large-eyed, brown, green, or black-blue boomslang snake is a member of the Colubridae family and is a native of sub-Saharan Africa. Boomslangs require competent …
The medium-sized white lipped python has dazzling white lips, a glossy black head, and iridescent scales. There are white-lipped pythons in Papua New Guinea. Because they are resilient and …
A medium-sized snake from Madagascar’s densely forested, dry woodlands, the Dumeril’s boa. It can reach a length of eight feet and has a thick-set body with a light to …
The dorsal and lateral scales of the non-venomous eastern indigo snake are blue-black. Florida and southern Georgia are just two examples of the southeastern U.S. states where eastern indigo …