Re: Can you please identify my snake?
Sorry FWK, but this is not a dice snake (Natrix tessellata).
- A dice snake has its eyes slightly above its head (like a green anaconda), the snake in the picture has its eyes at the side of its head
- Dice snakes have round pupils, the snake in the picture seems to have vertical cat-like pupils (this might be because of the poor picture quality and the perspective, but for me the pupil does not seem to be round).
- The coloration of Natrix tessellata consists of 4 to 5 rows of (almost) square spots which are either alternating or might even form stripes or bands. The snake in the picture shows only small spots.
- Abbouf is from Lesotho, an enclave in South Africa. He bought the snake in a “Ghetto shop”, so I suppose the snake was caught in the immediate proximity. The most southern distribution of the dice snake is the Nile delta in northern Egypt, so it just scratches Africa. To Lesotho it’s still several thousand miles distance to the south…
Abbouf, I don’t know what you have. It is some kind of colubrid, but if it is a water snake, some kind of ratsnake or even a rear fanged snake is impossible to say for me. I don’t have much literature about the herpetofauna of South Africa and what I have shows no snake which is even similar to what you got. I suppose your best bet would be to post this picture in a South African reptile forum. They should know what it is…
Anyway, I would get it out of the water. Put it into a dry enclosure with a water bowl. Even if it is some kind of “water snake” they also stay on land and enter the water only to escape some predators or in search of food.
Be careful that it does not bite you. I don’t think that it is a “real” venomous snake but it might be a rear fanged snake.
Roman
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