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Colubridae

Mizo Brook Snake

Harmless

Smithophis mizoramensis

Mizo Brook Snake
Smithophis mizoramensis, (c) huanyun1, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

The Mizo Brook Snake (Smithophis mizoramensis) is a non-venomous snake in the Colubridae family.

Family
Colubridae

About the Mizo Brook Snake

The Mizo Brook Snake belongs to the Colubridae family, colubrids. The largest snake family, and the one most snakes you meet belong to.

Colubridae is by far the biggest family of snakes, with roughly two thousand species worldwide. It is a catch-all of mostly slender, agile, day-active snakes: ratsnakes, kingsnakes, gartersnakes, watersnakes, racers, whipsnakes, and hundreds more. The vast majority are harmless to people and kill prey by grabbing or constricting rather than with venom.

Its genus, Smithophis, covers rain snakes. Smithophis is a small genus of stream-loving Asian colubrids known only from the wet hill country of northeast India and nearby Myanmar.

The Mizo Brook Snake is non-venomous and harmless to people. Like most snakes it is a quiet predator that helps keep rodents and other small prey in check.

Field-guide summary compiled from taxonomy and verified occurrence records. Detailed natural-history notes for this species are still being added.

Frequently asked: Mizo Brook Snake

Is the Mizo Brook Snake venomous?
No. The Mizo Brook Snake (Smithophis mizoramensis) is non-venomous and is not considered dangerous to humans. Like most snakes, it will retreat rather than bite when given the chance.
Is the Mizo Brook Snake poisonous?
Snakes are venomous, not poisonous. "Poisonous" means harmful to eat or touch; "venomous" means injecting toxins through a bite. The Mizo Brook Snake is neither poisonous nor venomous.
Is the Mizo Brook Snake dangerous?
The Mizo Brook Snake is not dangerous to humans. It has no medically significant venom and bites only defensively if cornered or handled.

More Colubridae snakes

Classification

How scientists group this snake, from the broadest category down to the exact species. Each step narrows to its closest relatives.

OrderThe broad group of scaled reptiles: all snakes and lizards
Squamata
FamilyA group of related snakes that share key traits
Colubridae
GenusA close-knit group of very similar species
Smithophis
SpeciesThis exact snake, named in the two-part scientific name
Smithophis mizoramensis

Keep learning

Distribution from GBIF & iNaturalist. Venom status per CDC. Informational only. Never handle a snake to identify it.