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Craspedocephalus trigonocephalus, the Sri Lankan pit viper, [4] Ceylon pit viper, [3] Sri Lankan green pitviper [3] or locally, pala polonga, (Sinhala: පළා පොළඟා) is a venomous pit viper species endemic to Sri Lanka. No subspecies are currently recognized. [3]
Hypnale nepa, the Sri Lankan hump-nosed viper, [3] is a venomous pitviper species endemic to Sri Lanka where it is known as මූකලන් තෙලිස්සා (mukalan thelissa) in Sinhala. Earlier thought that Hypnale walli and Hypnale nepa were two distinct species, but it is now accepted that it is the same species and Hypnale walli ...
Russell's viper is found in India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan. Populations from South-East Asia previously assigned to this species are now considered to be part of a different species, Daboia siamensis. [4] The type locality is listed as "India". More specifically, this would be the Coromandel Coast, by inference of Russell ...
Follow live coverage of Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka from the Sri Lanka in Bangladesh 2024 today. The ICC Test Championship sees nine teams compete across a two-year cycle of matches before a two-team ...
South Indian saw-scaled viper [22] Peninsular India. E. c. multisquamatus: Cherlin, 1981 Multiscale saw-scaled viper From Uzbekistan to Iran in the south and east to western Pakistan. E. c. sinhaleyus: Deraniyagala, 1951 Sri Lankan saw-scaled viper Sri Lanka. E. c. sochureki: Stemmler, 1969 Sochurek's saw-scaled viper
Hump-nosed viper Peninsular India to the Western Ghats as far north as 16° N, and Sri Lanka. H. nepa (Laurenti, 1768) Sri Lankan hump-nosed viper In Sri Lanka throughout forested areas, from lowland rainforest to over 1,800 m (5,900 ft) altitude. H. zara , 1849 Gray's hump-nosed viper Sri Lanka.
Captain Dhananjaya de Silva and Kamindu Mendis hit half-centuries as Sri Lanka reached 233-6 at lunch on Day 3 to take control of the series-opening cricket test against Bangladesh on Sunday. De ...
Sri Lankan saw-scaled viper. [4] Known as vali polanga (වැලි පොලඟා) [5] (can also be spelt as veli polanga) by the Sinhala speaking community. The vernacular name veli polanga translates as "sand viper".