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🌟🐍 5 Most Beautiful Snakes in the World That Will Take Your Breath Away! 🐍🌟

Snakes might seem scary to some, but these stunning serpents prove they can also be incredibly beautiful. From iridescent scales to vibrant rainbow colors, these five snakes show the true artistry of nature!

✨ 1️⃣ Blue Malaysian Coral Snake
With its striking electric blue body and bright red head, tail, and belly, this snake looks like it came straight out of a fantasy world. Found in Southeast Asia, it’s as beautiful as it is rare.

🌈 2️⃣ Brazilian Rainbow Boa
This snake gets its name from its shimmering, iridescent scales that reflect every color of the rainbow when hit by light. Native to the Amazon rainforest, it’s one of the most visually stunning snakes on Earth.

💎 3️⃣ Emerald Tree Boa
A bright emerald green body with white zigzag markings makes this snake a true jewel of the rainforest. Found in South America, it spends most of its life gracefully coiled in trees.

🔥 4️⃣ Eyelash Viper
Known for its “eyelash”-like scales above its eyes and its incredible range of colors — from bright yellow to green and even pink — this snake is both elegant and fierce. Found in Central and South America, it’s a true master of camouflage and beauty.

🌊 5️⃣ San Francisco Garter Snake
Often called the most beautiful snake in North America, it has bold blue, red, and black stripes that make it look like a living work of art. Sadly, it’s also endangered, making its beauty even more precious.


Category

🐳
Animals
Transcript
00:00In the previous video, I told you about 5 killer snakes.
00:04But do you know there are also beautiful snakes lives in the world?
00:07Well in this video, I will tell you about 5 beatiful snakes.
00:11So starting with the number 1.
00:13Green Tree Python
00:14The Green Tree Python, Morelia viridis, also known as the Emerald Green Python,
00:21is a species of snake in the family Python ID.
00:25The species is native to New Guinea, some islands in Indonesia,
00:29and the Cape York Peninsula in Australia.
00:33First described by Hermann Schlegel in 1872,
00:36it was known for many years as Chondropython viridis.
00:40As its common name suggests, it is a bright green snake that can reach a total length,
00:45including tail, of 2 meter 6.6 ft and a weight of 1.6 kg, 3.5 alia,
00:52with females slightly larger and heavier than males.
00:55Living generally in trees, the Green Tree Python mainly hunts and eats small reptiles and mammals.
01:03It is a popular pet, and numbers in the wild have suffered with large-scale smuggling
01:08of wild-caught Green Tree Pythons in Indonesia.
01:11Despite this, the Green Tree Python is rated as least concern on the IUCN Red List of Endangered Species.
01:20German naturalist Hermann Schlegel described the Green Tree Python in 1872 as
01:26Python viridis, number 2.
01:28The Rainbow Boa, Epicrates Centria, is a boa species endemic to Central and South America.
01:37A semi-arboreal species.
01:39Not only do they climb in the wild but also proven in captivity.
01:43It is known for its attractive iridescent holographic sheen caused by structural coloration.
01:49Five subspecies are currently recognized including the nominate subspecies described here.
01:55The Rainbow Boa is found in Lower Central America, Costa Rica and Panama, and farther south into South America.
02:04It occurs east of the Andes, roughly reaching northern Argentina, in the provinces Chaco, Cordoba,
02:12Corrientes, Formosa, Salta, Santiago del Estero and Tucumán.
02:18The Rainbow Boa's habitat generally consists of humid woodlands and rainforests,
02:22but it can also be found in open savannas.
02:25Number 3.
02:26Eyelash Viper
02:27Bothricus schlegeli, known commonly as the Eyelash Viper, is a species of venomous pit viper in the family Vipiridae.
02:36The species is native to Central and South America.
02:40Small and arboreal, this species is characterized by a wide array of color variations,
02:46as well as the superciliary scales above the eyes.
02:49It is the most common of the green palm pit vipers and is often present in zoological exhibits.
02:58The Eyelash Viper is a relatively small species of pit viper, with adults ranging from 55, 82 cm, 22, 32 in, long,
03:08and females being longer and more variable in size than males, which can grow to 69 cm, 27 in, long.
03:16It has a wide, triangular-shaped head and eyes with vertical pupils.
03:20Like all pit vipers, it is solnoglyphus, having large, hypodermic, needle-like fangs in the front of the upper jaw that fold back when not in use,
03:31and has heat-sensitive organs, or pits, located on either side of the head between the eye and nostril.
03:38Number 4. Ring-necked snake
03:43Diadophis punctatus, commonly known as the ring-necked snake or ring-necked snake,
03:49is a harmless species of colubrid snake found throughout much of the United States, Central Mexico, and Southeastern Canada.
03:58Ring-necked snakes are secretive, nocturnal snakes, so are rarely seen during the daytime.
04:03They are best known for their unique defense posture of curling up their tails,
04:08exposing their bright red-orange posterior, ventral surface, when threatened.
04:15Ring-necked snakes are believed to be fairly abundant throughout most of their range,
04:19though no scientific evaluation supports this hypothesis.
04:24Scientific research is lacking for the ring-necked snake,
04:27and more in-depth investigations are greatly needed.
04:33Number 5. Vine-snake
04:35His body form is extremely slender, with a long-pointed projecting snout,
04:42which is rather more than twice as long as the eye.
04:45Adult coloration varies from light brown to dull yellow-green,
04:49and often a startling fluorescent green.
04:52The type and number of scales is used to identify the snakes.
04:56In this species, the internasals are usually in contact with the labial, or lip scales.
05:03There are one to four small loreals, between the prefrontal and the labial scales.
05:10The frontal is as long as its distance from the end of the snout,
05:14or a little longer, and a little longer than the parietal scales.
05:19In the wild, they prey on small reptiles, but, in captivity, they can accept fish,
05:30small vertebrates such as mice, pinky, or similar or other reptiles, for meal.
05:36query charges
05:37Arvido
05:38Eros
05:39Lonzo
05:40Arvido
05:40alan
05:42Shen
05:48Shen
05:50Shen
05:50Shen
05:52Shen
05:57Shen
05:58Shen
06:05Shen
06:05Shen
06:06non Gill

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