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Viperidae

Salazar's Pit Viper

Venomous

Trimeresurus salazar

Salazar's Pit Viper
Trimeresurus salazar, (c) Rohit, some rights reserved (CC BY-SA)

The Salazar's Pit Viper (Trimeresurus salazar) is a venomous snake in the Viperidae family, recorded in 3 countries.

If you are bitten

This is a venomous snake. Treat any bite as a medical emergency: stay calm, keep the bitten limb still and roughly level with the heart, remove rings and tight clothing, and get to emergency care immediately. Do not apply a tourniquet, cut the wound, apply ice, or try to suck out venom. Call your local emergency number or poison center.

Family
Viperidae
Danger
high

About the Salazar's Pit Viper

Trimeresurus salazar, also known as Salazar's pit viper, is a species of venomous, green pit viper first discovered in 2019 in the lowlands of the western part of Arunachal Pradesh, India; the fifth new reptile species to be discovered in the region in 2019. It was named after Salazar Slytherin from the Harry Potter series. It has a dark green head and yellowish green dorsal scales on the rest of its body. The species is sexually dichromatic; the males have reddish-orange and yellow-orange stripes and a rusty red-orange tail that the females lack. Its habitat is under threat from human development activities.

Taxonomy and etymology

This snake was first discovered during a herpetological expedition in the summer of 2019 to the Eastern Himalayas in Arunachal Pradesh, India, which is a biodiversity hotspot and has a high degree of landscape heterogeneity with elevation ranging from 100 to 7000 m and distinct climatic regimes. The expedition collected two specimens of a green pit viper of the genus Trimeresurus in the lowlands near Pakke Tiger Reserve, which were believed to be either Trimeresurus septentrionalis or Trimeresurus albolabris based upon their coloration and the number of dorsal scale rows. These specimens were later compared with eleven specimens of T. septentrionalis and T. albolabris from the collections of the Bombay Natural History Society, the Natural History Museum, London, National Museum of Natural History in Paris and the University of Copenhagen, and differences were found in the coloration of the lateral stripe on the head and the body in males. Molecular analysis of the genomic DNA confirmed that the specimens were a new species of green pit viper. It became the fifth new reptile species to be discovered in Arunachal Pradesh in 2019. The researchers also found two specimens of the new species in the Natural History Museum of Denmark which had been collected by a Danish naturalist, Bernt Wilhelm Westermann, between 1811 and 1816 but were wrongly labeled as white-lipped pit vipers.

This new species of green pit viper, Trimeresurus salazar, was named after Salazar Slytherin from the Harry Potter series, with a suggested common name of Salazar's pit viper. In the fictional book and movie series, Slytherin is famous for being a Parselmouth, a person who can communicate with snakes. As such, the house he founded in Hogwarts is represented by a snake, and is also associated with the color green.

Description

Salazar's pit viper has a long and thin body with a length reaching 363 to 415 mm, and a triangular, elongated head which is clearly distinct from the neck. These vipers are green but also have yellow, orange, red, or gold markings. Males have a reddish orange stripe running from their preocular scales to the lateral side of the nape, a yellow-orange ventrolateral stripe and a short, bilobed hemipenis. The head is dark green in color which fades to a yellowish green color on its dorsal scales, except for the first dorsal scale row which is yellowish white with a faint orange patch. The tail has rusty red dorsal scales and orange ventral scales. Juveniles are brightly colored with the males having a much more prominent lateral stripe on the head. Females lack both reddish orange head stripe and the yellow-orange ventrolateral stripe. The appearance of T. salazar is different to the T. albolabris, T. septentrionalis, and the T. insularis because of the greater number of pterygoid and dentary teeth, the reddish-orange head stripe in the males and the smaller size of its hemipenis. It has 6 palatine, 15 pterygoid and 19 dentary teeth.

Adapted from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA.

Frequently asked: Salazar's Pit Viper

Is the Salazar's Pit Viper venomous?
Yes. The Salazar's Pit Viper (Trimeresurus salazar) is venomous and belongs to the Viperidae family (viper). Its bite is considered high risk to people. Treat any bite as a medical emergency.
Is the Salazar's Pit Viper poisonous?
Snakes are venomous, not poisonous. "Poisonous" means harmful to eat or touch; "venomous" means injecting toxins through a bite. The Salazar's Pit Viper is venomous, delivering venom through a bite.
Is the Salazar's Pit Viper dangerous?
This is a venomous snake. Treat any bite as a medical emergency: stay calm, keep the bitten limb still and roughly level with the heart, remove rings and tight clothing, and get to emergency care immediately. Do not apply a tourniquet, cut the wound, apply ice, or try to suck out venom. Call your local emergency number or poison center.
Where does the Salazar's Pit Viper live?
The Salazar's Pit Viper has verified records in 3 countries, including India, Bhutan, Nepal. See the distribution section below for its full range.
What does the Salazar's Pit Viper eat?
The diet of pit vipers in the genus Trimeresurus includes lizards, amphibians, birds, rodents, and other small mammals.
Why is it called the Salazar's Pit Viper?
This snake was first discovered during a herpetological expedition in the summer of 2019 to the Eastern Himalayas in Arunachal Pradesh, India, which is a biodiversity hotspot and has a high degree of landscape heterogeneity with elevation ranging from 100 to 7000 m and distinct climatic regimes. The expedition collected two specimens of a green pit viper of the genus Trimeresurus in the lowlands near Pakke Tiger Reserve, which were believed to be either Trimeresurus septentrionalis or Trimeresurus albolabris based upon their coloration and the number of dorsal scale rows.

If you are bitten by the Salazar's Pit Viper

A venomous snakebite is a medical emergency. Call your local emergency number immediately. In the US, dial 911 or Poison Control at 1-800-222-1222.

Do

  • Get away from the snake and stay calm. Most bites worsen when people panic or try again to handle the snake.
  • Call 911 or Poison Control (1-800-222-1222) right away. Antivenom works best when given early.
  • Note the time of the bite and, from a safe distance, the snake's color and pattern, a phone photo is enough. Do not chase it.
  • Keep the bitten limb still and at roughly heart level. Sit or lie down and limit movement.
  • Remove rings, watches, and tight clothing near the bite before swelling starts.
  • Gently wash the bite with soap and water and cover it with a clean, dry dressing.

Do not

  • Do not cut the wound or try to suck out the venom.
  • Do not apply a tourniquet or ice.
  • Do not drink alcohol or caffeine.
  • Do not take aspirin or ibuprofen, they can worsen bleeding. Acetaminophen is safer for pain.
  • Do not try to catch or kill the snake. A dead snake can still bite by reflex.

First-aid guidance adapted from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC NIOSH), Venomous Snakes. Educational only; always follow the instructions of emergency responders.

Where it is found

More Viperidae 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
Viperidae
GenusA close-knit group of very similar species
Trimeresurus
SpeciesThis exact snake, named in the two-part scientific name
Trimeresurus salazar

Keep learning

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