Atractaspis

Genus of snakes


title: "Atractaspis" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["atractaspididae", "snake-genera", "taxa-named-by-andrew-smith-(zoologist)"] description: "Genus of snakes" topic_path: "general/atractaspididae" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atractaspis" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Genus of snakes ::

| name = Atractaspis | image = Atractaspis engaddensis.jpg | image_caption = Atractaspis engaddensis | taxon = Atractaspis | authority = A. Smith, 1849

Common names

Common names for snakes of the genus Atractaspis include burrowing vipers, burrowing asps, mole vipers, stiletto snakes, side-stabbing snakes, side-stabbers. "Side stabbing" refers to the snakes' uncommon ability to strike with the side of its head and inject venom with one protruding fang.

Geographic range

Species of the genus Atractaspis are found mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa, with a limited distribution in the Jordan valley in Israel, Palestine and the Arabian Peninsula.

Description

Members of the genus Atractaspis share the following characteristics: Venom fangs enormously developed; a few teeth on the palatines, none on the pterygoids; mandibles edentulous anteriorly, with 2 or 3 very small teeth in the middle of the dentary bone. Postfrontal bone absent. Head small, not distinct from neck, covered with large symmetrical shields; nostril between 2 nasals; no loreal; eye minute, with round pupil. Body cylindrical; dorsal scales smooth, without apical pits, in 17 to 37 rows; ventrals rounded. Tail short; subcaudals either single or in two rows.

Species

::data[format=table]

SpeciesTaxon author*Subspecies**Common nameGeographic range
A. andersoniiBoulenger, 1905Oman, Yemen
A. aterrimaGünther, 1863————slender burrowing aspAfrica: from Senegal and the Gambia east to DR Congo and Uganda.
A. battersbyide Witte, 1959Battersby's burrowing aspAfrica: Bolobo, on the Congo River basin, DR Congo.
A. bibroniiA. Smith, 1849bibroniiBibron's burrowing aspSouthern Africa, from central Namibia, east to northern South Africa, north to south-eastern DR Congo, eastern Tanzania, coastal Kenya, and extreme southern coastal Somalia.
A. boulengeriMocquard, 1897matschiensis
mixta
schmidti
schultzei
vanderborghtiCentral African burrowing aspAfrica: the forests of the western Congo River basin.
A. branchiRödel et al., 2019Branch's stiletto snakeAfrica: from Liberia to Guinea
A. congicaW. Peters, 1877leleupi
orientalisCongo burrowing aspAfrica: from the mouth of the Congo River south to Angola, south-eastern DR Congo and northern Zambia.
A. corpulenta(Hallowell, 1854)kivuensis
leucurafat burrowing aspAfrica: from Liberia to Ghana and from Nigeria eastwards to north-eastern DR Congo.
A. dahomeyensisBocage, 1887————Dahomey burrowing aspAfrica: from southwestern Cameroon, north and west through Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, north-western Ivory Coast, south-western Burkina Faso and south-central Mali.
A. duerdeniGough, 1907Duerden's burrowing aspAfrica in two isolated populations: one in north-central Namibia and one in south-eastern Botswana and northern South Africa.
A. engaddensisHaas, 1950En-Gedi asp, alasawad alkhabithAsia: Israel, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon
A. engdahliLönnberg & Andersson, 1913————Engdahl's burrowing aspAfrica: southern Somalia and the lower Juba Valley northwest into northeastern Kenya.
A. fallaxW. Peters, 1867Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia
A. irregularis(J.T. Reinhardt, 1843)angeli
bipostocularis
conradsi
parkeri
uelensisvariable burrowing aspAfrica: from Liberia to Ghana, from Nigeria east to Uganda, southern Sudan, and western and central Kenya, and south to north-eastern Tanzania, DR Congo and north-western Angola.
A. leucomelasBoulenger, 1895————Ogaden burrowing aspAfrica: eastern Ethiopia, northwestern Somalia and Djibouti.
A. magrettiiScortecci, 1928western Eritrea, northwestern Ethiopia, south-eastern Sudan
A. microlepidotaGünther, 1866small-scaled burrowing aspAfrica: Senegal, Gambia, southern Mauritania, and western Mali
A. micropholisGünther, 1872Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, Nigeria
A. phillipsiBarbour, 1913south-eastern Sudan
A. reticulataSjöstedt, 1896brieni
heterochilusreticulate burrowing aspCentral Africa: from southern Cameroon, east to eastern DR Congo and south to Angola.
A. scortecciiParker, 1949————Somali burrowing aspAfrica: eastern Ethiopia and northern Somalia.
A. watsoniBoulenger, 1908Watson's burrowing aspBurkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Central African Republic, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal
::

*) A taxon author in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than Atractaspis.

**) Not including the nominate subspecies.

References

References

  1. {{ITIS
  2. "''Atractaspis'' ". ''Dahms Tierleben''. www.dahmstierleben.de/systematik/Reptilien/Squamata/Serpentes/colubroidea/lamprophiidae/Atractaspidinae.
  3. {{EMBL genus
  4. "''Atractaspis'' ". Wikispecies.
  5. [[species:Stephen Spawls. Spawls S]], [[William Roy Branch. Branch B]] (1995). ''The Dangerous Snakes of Africa: Natural History, Species Directory, Venoms and Snakebite''. Ralph Curtis Books. Dubai: Oriental Press. 192 pp. {{ISBN. 0-88359-029-8.
  6. [[George Albert Boulenger. Boulenger GA]] (1896). ''Catalogue of the Snakes in the British Museum (Natural History), Volume III., Containing the ... Viperidæ''. London: Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History). (Taylor and Francis, printers). xiv + 727 pp. + Plates I-XXV. (Genus ''Atractaspis'', pp. 510-511, Figure 36).

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