Stokes's sea snake

Last updated

Stokes's sea snake
Hydrus Stokesii (Discoveries in Australia).jpg
John Lort Stokes 1846 Discoveries in Australia
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Elapidae
Genus: Hydrophis
Species:
H. stokesii
Binomial name
Hydrophis stokesii
(Gray, 1846)
Synonyms [2]
  • Hydrus stokesii
    Gray, 1846
  • Hydrophis stokesii
    Günther, 1864
  • Distira stokesi
    Boulenger, 1890
  • Astrotia stokesii
    Wall, 1921
  • Disteira stokesii
    Grandison, 1978

Stokes's sea snake (Hydrophis stokesii) is a large species of sea snake in the family Elapidae. It is sometimes placed in its own genus Astrotia. The species is endemic to tropical Indo-Pacific oceanic waters.

Contents

Etymology

Both the specific name, stokesii, and the common name, Stokes' seasnake, are in honor of Royal Navy Admiral John Lort Stokes. [3]

Description

Stokes's sea snake is one of the heaviest and stoutest seasnakes, with the longest fangs of any marine snake. [4] Its fangs are long enough to pierce a wetsuit. [5] Its mid-ventral scales are enlarged to form a distinct keel on its belly, the keel frequently broken up into two wart-like tubercles. [6] A. stokesii is highly variable in colour, [7] ranging from cream to brown to black, often with broad black dorsal cross bands, or black rings. [8]

Rostral as deep as broad; nasals shorter than the frontal, more than twice as long as the suture between the prefrontals; frontal longer than broad, as long as or slightly longer than its distance from the rostral scale; one pre- and two postoculars, 9 or 10 upper labials, fourth, fifth, and sixth catering the eye, if not divided to form a series of suboculars; two or three superposed anterior temporals; no chin-shields. 39 to 47 scales round the neck, 48 to 53 round the middle of the body. Ventral scales usually distinct only quite anteriorly, further back in pairs and not larger than the adjoining scales; scales much imbricate, pointed. [8]

Total length 1.5 metres (5 ft).

Geographic range

It is distributed from India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to the South China Sea and Strait of Taiwan. It also lives in all waters of tropical Australia.

Human interactions

There are no reported human fatalities attributed to Stokes's sea snake. [4]

Stokes's sea snake is captured as bycatch in fisheries, for example in prawn fisheries in Australia. [1]

Habits

Stokes's sea snakes sometimes form migrating groups in the thousands, drifting in meter-long slicks in the Strait of Malacca. [4] They are ovoviviparous, producing small broods of five young each mating season. [9]

Taxonomy

It was first described and named as Hydrus stokesii by John Edward Gray in Appendix 3 to Volume 1 of John Lort Stokes' 1846 Discoveries in Australia . In 1972, McDowell resurrected the genus Disteira and merged Astrotia into it, although stokesii lacks the Oxyuranus pattern of venom gland muscle which typifies Disteira, and differs from others in that genus by number of body vertebrae and heart position. Cogger later refused to recognize the placement of stokesii into Disteira. [10]

References

  1. 1 2 Sanders, K.; White, M.-D.; Courtney, T.; Lukoschek, V. (2018) [amended version of 2010 assessment]. "Hydrophis stokesii". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species . 2018: e.T176708A136257093. doi: 10.2305/IUCN.UK.2010-4.RLTS.T176708A136257093.en . Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. "Hydrophis stokesii ". The Reptile Database. www.reptile-database.org.
  3. Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN   978-1-4214-0135-5. (Astrotia stokesii, p. 255).
  4. 1 2 3 O'Shea, Mark (2008), Venomous Snakes of the World, New Holland Publishers, p. 144, ISBN   978-1-84773-086-2
  5. Williamson, John A.; Fenner, Peter J.; Burnett, Joseph W.; Rifkin, Jacqueline F. (1996), Venomous and Poisonous Marine Animals: A Medical and Biological Handbook, UNSW Press, p. 403, ISBN   978-0-86840-279-6
  6. Greene, Harry W.; Fogden, Patricia; Fogden, Michael (2000), Snakes, University of California Press, p. 236, ISBN   978-0-520-22487-2
  7. Gopalakrishnakone, P. (1994), Sea Snake Toxinology, NUS Press, p. 177, ISBN   978-9971-69-193-6
  8. 1 2 Boulenger, G.A. (1890), The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. Reptilia and Batrachia, London: Secretary of State for India in Council. (Taylor and Francis, printers). xviii + 541 pp. (Distira stokesii, p. 408).
  9. Tomascik, Tomas (1997), The ecology of the Indonesian seas, Tuttle Publishing, p. 1140, ISBN   978-962-593-163-0
  10. Thorpe, Roger S.; Wüster, Wolfgang; Malhotra, Anita (1997), Venomous Snakes: Ecology, Evolution, and Snakebite, Oxford University Press, pp. 15–21, ISBN   978-0-19-854986-4

Further reading