About Craspedocephalus malabaricus (Jerdon, 1854)
This species, scientifically known as Craspedocephalus malabaricus (Jerdon, 1854), has the following physical description. Adult individuals can reach a snout-vent length (SVL) of 105 cm (41 inches), and their tails are prehensile. Weakly keeled dorsal scales are arranged in either 19 or 21 rows at midbody. Male individuals have 143 to 158 ventral scales, while female individuals have 136 to 159 ventral scales. The anal scale is entire. Subcaudal scales are paired; males have 50 to 63 subcaudals, and females have 44 to 54. The internasals are large and usually in contact with each other. There are 9 or 10 supralabials, and the first supralabial is completely separated from the nasal scale. A single row of scales sits between the supralabials and the elongated subocular. Temporal scales are either smooth or obliquely keeled. Many distinct color morphs are documented for this species, including yellow, green, and brown variants; the example noted here is a patterned brown morph.
For distribution and habitat, this species is endemic to the Western Ghats mountains. It occurs across southern and western India at elevations between 600 and 2,000 metres (2,000 to 6,600 feet), and its type locality is the Western Ghats of southwestern India. Confirmed records of the species come from Silent Valley, western Nilgiris, Wayanad, Coorg, the Malnad region of Karnataka, Castle Rock, Goa, and the Amboli hills and Kolhapur area of northern Maharashtra. It lives in riparian forests, and strongly favors hill streams and torrents located within dense wet rainforests. It can sometimes also be found in evergreen and deciduous forests, where it may occur on the ground, on stream bed rocks, on low vegetation, or in shrubs.
In terms of ecology, the Malabar pit viper is nocturnal, and is typically inactive during the day, though it may occasionally be observed basking on rocks or trees near streams. It is most often encountered during the monsoon months. It preys on frogs, lizards, nestling birds, musk shrews, mice, and other small animals.