- as amphiumas. They are also
known to
fishermen as "conger eels" or "
Congo snakes",
which are
zoologically incorrect designations or misnomers,
since amphiumas...
-
black snake black water viper blunt-tail
moccasin Congo copperhead cottonmouth cotton-mouthed
snake cottonmouth rattler cottonmouth water moccasin gaper:USGS...
- Collett's
snake Congo snake Copperhead American copperhead Australian copperhead Coral snake Arizona coral snake Beddome's
coral snake Brazilian coral snake Cape...
-
southeastern United States. It is commonly, but incorrectly,
called "
congo snake", "conger eel" or the "blind eel". Two-toed
amphiumas are the most prominent...
- sour milk. The
snake-stone is then
dropped into the
liquid to
supposedly draw out the poison."
Although called a 'stone' in the
Congo, a
black stone is...
- (water) moccasin, viper,
western cottonmouth moccasin, cotton-mouthed
snake,
Congo snake, trap-jaw, gapper.
Found in the
United States, from
southern Alabama...
-
garter snake –
Somalia Elapsoidea guentherii Bocage, 1866 – Günther's
garter snake – Angola, Cameroon,
Democratic Republic of
Congo,
Republic of
Congo, Zambia...
- Roux-Estève R (1995). "Les
serpents du
Congo:
liste commentée et clé de détermination [=
Snakes of the
Congo:
Annotated List and
Identification Key]"...
-
green snake or
Rwanda forest green snake, is a
species of
snake of the
family Colubridae. The
snake is
found in Rwanda,
Republic of the
Congo, and Uganda...
- The twig
snakes (genus Thelotornis), also
commonly known as bird
snakes or vine
snakes, are a
genus of rear-fanged
venomous snakes in the
family Colubridae...