
Most Venomous Snake of Asia|common Krait rescue|বিষধর সাপের দংশন থেকে বাঁচলেন গৃহস্থ|
Published at : September 04, 2021
Hello everybody....
The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus), also known as Indian krait or blue krait is a species of highly venomous snake of the genus Bungarus found in the Indian subcontinent. It is a member of the "big four" species, inflicting the most snakebites on humans in Bangladesh and India.
Some others names:
Bengali-কালাচ , কালচিতি, ডোমনাচিতি, শিয়র চাঁদা, নিয়র চাঁদা।
Tamil(India) - கட்டு விரியன்
Marathi - मण्यार (maṇyār), kanadar
Gujarati - કાળોતરો(કાલ્ નાગ
Odia - ଚିତ୍ତି
The average length is 0.9 m (3.0 ft), but they can grow to 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in). Males are longer, with proportionately longer tails. The head is flat and the neck hardly evident. The body is cylindrical, tapering towards the tail. The tail is short and rounded. The eyes are rather small, with rounded pupils, indistinguishable in life. The head shields are normal, with no loreals; four shields occur along the margin of the lower lip; the third and fourth supraoculars touch the eye. The scales are highly polished, in 15-17 rows; the vertebral row is distinctly enlarged and hexagonal. Ventrals number 185-225 and caudals 37-50, entire.
Colouration is generally black or bluish black, with about 40 thin, white crossbars which may be indistinct or absent anteriorly. The pattern, however, is complete and well defined in the young, which are marked with conspicuous crossbars even anteriorly; in old individuals, the narrow white lines may be found as a series of connected spots, with a prominent spot on the vertebral region. A white preocular spot may be present; the upper lips and the belly are white.
This species is found in main Peninsular India from Sindh (Pakistan), to the West Bengal plains and also in Dharmanagar, Tripura. It occurs throughout South India and Sri Lanka at elevations up to about 1600 m.It is also recorded from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal.
Its range comprises a wide variety of habitats. It is found in fields and low scrub jungle, as well as inhabited areas. It is known to take up residence in termite mounds, brick piles, rat holes, even inside houses.It is frequently found in water or in proximity to a water source.
Behavioral differences during day and night time have been reported in B. caeruleus. During the day, it is sluggish and generally docile. It often hides in rodent holes, loose soil, or beneath debris, so is rarely seen. It often rolls its body into a loose, coiled ball, keeping its head well concealed. When in this 'balled' condition, the snake allows considerable handling, but overhandling often instigates bites.
However, at night, the snake is very active and escapes by hissing loudly, or keeping still, occasionally biting the source of the annoyance.
The common krait's venom consists mostly of powerful neurotoxins, which induce muscle paralysis. Clinically, its venom contains presynaptic and postsynaptic neurotoxins,which generally affect the synaptic cleft (the points of information-transfer between neurons).
Rescue location: sijdia/Ranaghat/Nadia(WB)
""Stay away from sorcery and mantra tantra,Go to the hospital quickly after Venomous snake bite.""
Channel link: https://youtube.com/channel/UCSr3vmo8mW8XP_nwg7v8NDQ
https://youtu.be/1uluk-38eRo
https://youtu.be/jOjDr2Pvm6I
https://youtu.be/gi_NDSQcXKA
https://youtu.be/bsOMA8iQZwo
https://youtu.be/58yX5AUwRO8
Please Don't kill snake & Others wildlife 🙏
For emergency rescue Call:
+918001104549
+917908434933
You can give us a grant:
7908434933@Paytm
Email: jaydebmajumder45@gmail.com
Thanks for watching 🙏😊
Rescue by- Jaydeb Majumder
Videography by- Antu Mondal
Editing by- Myself
#rp00 #samiran_barik #snake_video
The common krait (Bungarus caeruleus), also known as Indian krait or blue krait is a species of highly venomous snake of the genus Bungarus found in the Indian subcontinent. It is a member of the "big four" species, inflicting the most snakebites on humans in Bangladesh and India.
Some others names:
Bengali-কালাচ , কালচিতি, ডোমনাচিতি, শিয়র চাঁদা, নিয়র চাঁদা।
Tamil(India) - கட்டு விரியன்
Marathi - मण्यार (maṇyār), kanadar
Gujarati - કાળોતરો(કાલ્ નાગ
Odia - ଚିତ୍ତି
The average length is 0.9 m (3.0 ft), but they can grow to 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in). Males are longer, with proportionately longer tails. The head is flat and the neck hardly evident. The body is cylindrical, tapering towards the tail. The tail is short and rounded. The eyes are rather small, with rounded pupils, indistinguishable in life. The head shields are normal, with no loreals; four shields occur along the margin of the lower lip; the third and fourth supraoculars touch the eye. The scales are highly polished, in 15-17 rows; the vertebral row is distinctly enlarged and hexagonal. Ventrals number 185-225 and caudals 37-50, entire.
Colouration is generally black or bluish black, with about 40 thin, white crossbars which may be indistinct or absent anteriorly. The pattern, however, is complete and well defined in the young, which are marked with conspicuous crossbars even anteriorly; in old individuals, the narrow white lines may be found as a series of connected spots, with a prominent spot on the vertebral region. A white preocular spot may be present; the upper lips and the belly are white.
This species is found in main Peninsular India from Sindh (Pakistan), to the West Bengal plains and also in Dharmanagar, Tripura. It occurs throughout South India and Sri Lanka at elevations up to about 1600 m.It is also recorded from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal.
Its range comprises a wide variety of habitats. It is found in fields and low scrub jungle, as well as inhabited areas. It is known to take up residence in termite mounds, brick piles, rat holes, even inside houses.It is frequently found in water or in proximity to a water source.
Behavioral differences during day and night time have been reported in B. caeruleus. During the day, it is sluggish and generally docile. It often hides in rodent holes, loose soil, or beneath debris, so is rarely seen. It often rolls its body into a loose, coiled ball, keeping its head well concealed. When in this 'balled' condition, the snake allows considerable handling, but overhandling often instigates bites.
However, at night, the snake is very active and escapes by hissing loudly, or keeping still, occasionally biting the source of the annoyance.
The common krait's venom consists mostly of powerful neurotoxins, which induce muscle paralysis. Clinically, its venom contains presynaptic and postsynaptic neurotoxins,which generally affect the synaptic cleft (the points of information-transfer between neurons).
Rescue location: sijdia/Ranaghat/Nadia(WB)
""Stay away from sorcery and mantra tantra,Go to the hospital quickly after Venomous snake bite.""
Channel link: https://youtube.com/channel/UCSr3vmo8mW8XP_nwg7v8NDQ
https://youtu.be/1uluk-38eRo
https://youtu.be/jOjDr2Pvm6I
https://youtu.be/gi_NDSQcXKA
https://youtu.be/bsOMA8iQZwo
https://youtu.be/58yX5AUwRO8
Please Don't kill snake & Others wildlife 🙏
For emergency rescue Call:
+918001104549
+917908434933
You can give us a grant:
7908434933@Paytm
Email: jaydebmajumder45@gmail.com
Thanks for watching 🙏😊
Rescue by- Jaydeb Majumder
Videography by- Antu Mondal
Editing by- Myself
#rp00 #samiran_barik #snake_video

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