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The Wolf Snake

The common wolf snake is one of the few snakes that actually seems to profit by 
a 
man-made environment. Houses with tiled roofs are their favorite hideouts. They 
are 
expert climbers and slide in between wooden beams with dexterity. Catching them 
on a 
roof is tricky business indeed since they always have the upper hand on this 
one 
(well maybe I should say that they have all the advantage  since hands don't 
apply 
to them!).



Sometimes though they might hide in the hollow created for the wooden beam that 
slides shut old Goan house doors. These hollows are more than a meter in length 
inside the wall and pulling out a foot long snake from the depths within isn't 
a 
walk in the park either!



The strangest place I've pulled out a wolf snake from is inside the chain guard 
of a 
motorcycle. How and why the snake had got in there I can only guess. I had to 
dismantle half the guard before I could access the greasy snake. Snake rescuing 
calls for mechanical skills as well!



Wolf snakes are fairly aggressive reptiles and won't hesitate to bite when 
first 
caught. When first touched the tendency of a wolf snake is to sit coiled and 
unmoving. If the touch stimulus continues though the wolf snake will uncoil and 
thrash and twist around madly.



Wolf snakes get their name from the long front teeth they possess. Presumably 
these 
help the snakes get a good grip on geckoes (their favorite prey).



The wolf snake's dark color marked with white bands across the body confuses 
most 
people into falsely identifying it as a common krait. Adding to the confusion 
is the 
fact that the wolf snake and the common krait are both nocturnal snakes and 
therefore likely to be spotted during the same time.



An easy way to tell them apart is to notice the lines running across the 
snake's 
body. The difference between the two is that the wolf snake has white bands 
markedly 
more prominent in the head region which disappear towards the tail end. The 
krait, 
on the other hand, has thin white lines mostly located in the posterior half of 
the 
snake's body, but disappearing toward the head.



In Goa wolf snakes come in two different color morphs. One of the morphs is 
darkly 
colored with the characteristic bands across the body. The other is much 
lighter and 
lacks bands altogether.






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