About Naja subfulva Laurent, 1955
This species is Naja subfulva, first described by Laurent in 1955. Most adult populations have a brown forebody that gradually darkens to black toward the tail; the lighter brown regions often have spots or mottled patterning. Adult individuals from the Lake Victoria area and parts of the Congo Basin are entirely black on their dorsal side. The sides and underside of the head are light, most often cream-colored, and the labial scales have dark edges, though these dark edges can be difficult to distinguish in some populations. The ventral side may become black toward the posterior end, or may stay light along its entire length. At midbody, dorsal scales are arranged in 17 rows along the East African coast, and in 19 rows across all other parts of the species' range. This species has between 197 and 228 ventral scales, and between 57 and 70 subcaudal scales. The maximum recorded total length for the species is 269 cm. It is distributed across East and Central Africa, where it inhabits forests, thickets, and mostly wooded savanna environments. Confirmed recorded populations come from South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Angola, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, and Chad. The species is also thought to probably occur in Nigeria.