Furina diadema (Schlegel, 1837) is a animal in the Elapidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Furina diadema (Schlegel, 1837) (Furina diadema (Schlegel, 1837))
๐Ÿฆ‹ Animalia

Furina diadema (Schlegel, 1837)

Furina diadema (Schlegel, 1837)

Furina diadema, the red-naped snake, is a small Australian snake with a distinctive red neck patch that lives across eastern Australia and lays eggs.

Family
Genus
Furina
Order
Class
Squamata

About Furina diadema (Schlegel, 1837)

Furina diadema, commonly called the red-naped snake, has small black eyes, a shiny black head and neck. Its head is partially flattened, with a white streak along the upper lip. The back of the neck features a distinct, well-defined orange or red patch shaped like a diamond, crescent, or oval. The snake's belly is either cream or white, and the rest of its body is red-brown. The edges of the dorsal scales are black or dark brown, giving the body a net-like patterned appearance. This species has a slim body and is classified as a small snake. Reported maximum total lengths vary between sources: one notes 45 cm, while another gives a maximum of 40 cm, and males are smaller than females. Red-naped snakes have 160 to 210 ventral scales, a divided anal scale, 35 to 70 subcaudal scales, and typically 15 rows of mid-body scales. The red-naped snake is a terrestrial species that occurs across eastern Australia, in dry woodlands, forests, coastal forests, heaths, tussock grasslands and shrublands. It typically avoids wet habitats such as rainforests. This snake shelters under rocks and fallen timber, inside ant or termite nests, under wood piles, leaf litter, old sheets of iron, in rock crevices and abandoned animal burrows. The red-naped snake is found across four Australian states (Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia) and the Northern Territory. It occurs in areas ranging from arid to humid, extending from Port Augusta in South Australia to Cairns in northern Queensland. Documented locations where the species has been sighted include the Coongie Lakes Ramsar Site in South Australia; Woomargama National Park and Mullengandra in the NSW Murray Catchment; the Lower Murray Darling basin in New South Wales; the area around Alice Springs in the Northern Territory; and far north-western Victoria in riverine areas, per Museum of Victoria records. The species is also present in 18 national parks across Queensland. The red-naped snake is oviparous, meaning it lays eggs. Clutch size records vary, with recorded ranges including 2โ€“5, 1โ€“10, 3โ€“6, 1โ€“5, and a single recorded clutch of 8 eggs, with an average clutch size of 3. In subtropical regions, red-naped snakes can produce more than one clutch per year. Eggs hatch in January in most regions, and in February in cooler areas. Recorded lengths of newly hatched snakes are 12 cm (4.7 in) and 15 cm (5.9 in). Red-naped snakes reach adulthood within one year of hatching.

Photo: (c) Jono Dashper, all rights reserved, uploaded by Jono Dashper

Taxonomy

Animalia โ€บ Chordata โ€บ Squamata โ€บ โ€บ Elapidae โ€บ Furina

More from Elapidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy ยท Disclaimer

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