Viperidae
Spotted Night Adder
VenomousCausus maculatus






6 photographs of the Spotted Night Adder. © Lucky Okpanachi Atabo.
The Spotted Night Adder (Causus maculatus) is a venomous snake in the Viperidae family, recorded in 32 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 Spotted Night Adder
Causus maculatus is species of venomous snake in the subfamily Viperinae of the family Viperidae. The species is native to West Africa and Central Africa. There are no subspecies that are recognized as being valid. Common names include forest rhombic night adder, West African night adder, and spotted night adder.
Description
C. maculatus is small and stout, with an average total length (tail included) of 30–60 cm (12–24 in). It grows to a maximum total length of about 70 cm (28 in), or perhaps slightly longer.
The snout is obtuse with a rounded rostral scale. A single loreal is present. The circumorbital ring consists of 2–3 preoculars, 1–2 postoculars and 1–2 suboculars. There are 6 supralabials and 9–10 sublabials. Four sublabials are in contact with the sublinguals. There are 2–3 temporal scales.
At midbody there are 17–19 rows of dorsal scales. The ventral scales number 118–137 in females and 124–144 in males. The subcaudal scales number 14–23 in females and 15–26 in males. Within the geographic range of this species, the ventral scale counts increase from south to north and from east to west. This diagnostic information is apparently according to Hughes (1977).
Spawls and Branch (1995) give a slightly different description of the body scalation: at midbody there are 17–22 rows of dorsal scales, which have been described as soft and feebly keeled. The ventral scales number 124–151 in females and 118–154 in males, with the highest numbers found in specimens from Uganda and Ethiopia.
The color pattern usually consists of a brown ground color, sometimes grayish, olive or light green, with a series of dark brown or blackish patches down the back (this pattern is less distinct on the first quarter of the body). The flanks are sprinkled with black scales. There is much variation in the dorsal pattern; some specimens, especially those from more arid regions, may have no pattern at all, making them hard to identify. Those from DR Congo are often a uniform brown. The belly may be white, cream or pinkish-gray. The ventral scales may be uniform in color, but sometimes each scale grades from light to dark, giving the belly a finely barred appearance. The head usually has a distinct V-shaped mark. This mark may be solid black in juveniles, but in adults it becomes brown with a black outline. Sometimes, a short dark line is present extending backwards from the posterior of the eye.
Geographic range
C. maculatus is found Mauritania and Senegal east to western Ethiopia, south to DR Congo and northern Angola. The type locality is listed as "Liberia, Western Africa."
Mallow et al. (2003) mostly quote Spawls and Branch (1995), giving the geographic range as West Africa and Central Africa, from Senegal east to Chad, southeast to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and northeast into southeastern Sudan. It is also found in the river gorges and low country of southwestern Ethiopia, southwest to northern Angola and DR Congo.
Habitat
Adapted from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA.
Frequently asked: Spotted Night Adder
- Is the Spotted Night Adder venomous?
- Yes. The Spotted Night Adder (Causus maculatus) 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 Spotted Night Adder poisonous?
- Snakes are venomous, not poisonous. "Poisonous" means harmful to eat or touch; "venomous" means injecting toxins through a bite. The Spotted Night Adder is venomous, delivering venom through a bite.
- Is the Spotted Night Adder 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 Spotted Night Adder live?
- The Spotted Night Adder has verified records in 32 countries, including Ghana, Central African Republic, Congo, Democratic Republic of the. See the distribution section below for its full range.
- What does the Spotted Night Adder eat?
- C. maculatus preys predomonately upon frogs and toads.
If you are bitten by the Spotted Night Adder
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
Rhombic Night AdderCausus rhombeatus
Snouted Night AdderCausus defilippii
Forest Night AdderCausus lichtensteinii
Green Night AdderCausus resimus
Two-lined Night AdderCausus bilineatus
Western RattlesnakeCrotalus oreganus
Western Diamond-backed RattlesnakeCrotalus atrox
Eastern CopperheadAgkistrodon contortrix
Classification
How scientists group this snake, from the broadest category down to the exact species. Each step narrows to its closest relatives.
Keep learning
- Are Snakes Dangerous? The Real Risk, in PerspectiveMost snakes are harmless and avoid people. Here is the honest picture of snakebite risk worldwide and how to lower your own.
- Snakebite First Aid: What to Do (and What Never to Do)A clear, CDC-based guide to snakebite first aid: the steps that help, the popular myths that hurt, and how to tell a serious bite from a minor one.
- Venomous vs Nonvenomous: How to Tell the DifferenceThe folk rules for telling venomous snakes apart, where each one fails, and why location-based identification beats guessing by sight.
- What to Do If You Find a SnakeFound a snake at home or on a trail? Here is how to stay calm, give it space, identify it safely, and know when to call a professional.
Distribution from GBIF & iNaturalist. Venom status per CDC. Background: Wikipedia. Informational only. Never handle a snake to identify it.