coral snake
- Related Topics:
- venom
- elapid
- Homoroselaps
- Micrurus
- On the Web:
- CiteSeerX - Experimental studies of coral snake mimicry: do snakes mimic millipedes? (Nov. 12, 2024)
coral snake, any of more than 100 species of small, secretive, and brightly patterned venomous snakes of the cobra family (Elapidae). New World coral snakes range in size from 40 to 160 cm (16 to 63 inches) and are classified in two genera (Micruroides and Micrurus); they are found mainly in the tropics. Three additional genera of related snakes live in Asia and Africa. Most species are tricoloured (rarely bicoloured), with various combinations of red, black, and yellow or white rings; width of the rings varies. All have smooth scales and a short tail. Short hollow fangs deliver a potent neurotoxic venom.
Micrurus has the most species of the New World coral snake genera, about 80. They range from the southern United States to Argentina. Only two species, however, live in the United States. The eastern coral snake, or harlequin snake (Micrurus fulvius), which lives in the southeastern U.S., is about 1 metre (3.3 feet) long and has wide red and black rings separated by narrow rings of yellow. The Arizona coral snake (Micruroides euryxanthus) is a small (40–50-cm) inhabitant of the American Southwest.
In most classifications, Old World coral snakes comprise the genera Calliophis (with 10 species) and Sinomicrurus (five species) of southern Asia and the genus Hemibungarus (three species) of the Philippines. Some classifications also include African harlequin snakes (Homoroselaps), which are known for their pronounced orange, black, and yellow coloration. Although some classifications of New World coral snakes also include the genus Leptomicrurus (two species), most place members of this group into the genus Micrurus.
There are 50 genera of coral snake mimics, such as the false coral snakes (see king snake and scarlet snake), and nearly one-third of all American species have some coral snake pattern. The rhymes “Red on yellow, kill a fellow, red on black, venom lack” and “Red and yellow can kill a fellow; Red and black, friend of Jack” are two of several similar mnemonics that have been used to distinguish coral snakes from similar North American snakes, such as the scarlet king snake (Lampropeltis elapsoides). Herpetologists note that these rhymes are useful in separating true coral snakes from their mimics in the United States, but people should not rely upon them in other parts of the world.
Coral snakes belong to the family Elapidae, which also includes cobras and various other venomous snakes. Most coral snakes prey on other snakes, particularly worm snakes and blind snakes, lizards being a secondary food source. New World coral snakes lay 1 to 13 eggs. The longevity record for Micrurus in captivity is 18 years.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) considers most coral snakes to be species of least concern. However, it lists the Catamayo coral snake (Micrurus catamayensis) of Ecuador and the Merida coral snake (M. meridensis) of western Venezuela as endangered species and the Roatan coral snake (M. ruatanus) of Roatán island in Honduras and coral snakes from the species M. medemi of central Colombia as critically endangered species.