Banana Pepper, my high yellow male Chironius, out for some sun today. In the indoor pic he's bowing his neck down at me and inflating it. Such a cool defensive display!
Chironius carinatus
seen from China
seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from Portugal
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Poland
seen from Türkiye
seen from Sweden
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Greece
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Lithuania
seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil

seen from Portugal
Banana Pepper, my high yellow male Chironius, out for some sun today. In the indoor pic he's bowing his neck down at me and inflating it. Such a cool defensive display!
Chironius carinatus
Yellow-spotted Whipsnake (Chironius flavopictus), family Colubridae, Valle del cauca, Colombia
Photograph by Moderat Zai
A sipo (Chironius sp.) in Ecuador
by Aaron Bloch
Chironius
Am Stall in Wohlde, Stapelholm (20e)
It is about to molt. (Chironius sp. 蚩蛇属,Eastern Peru)
Pasquale Jones is my favorite worm. Don't tell the other worms.
Chironius carinatus
This little 17.3g terror tore into me. Really wasn't sure my finger was gonna make it, with the slashing swivel action Chironius do with the rear teeth. 😂
Chironius carinatus
A new species of Sipo Snake, Chironius (Serpentes: Colubridae), from the Yungas of Bolivia
Oliver Quinteros Muñoz, Pedro Gómez-Murillo, et al.
ABSTRACT
A new snake of the genus Chironius is described based on external morphological characters and phylogenetic evidence. The new species occurs in Bolivia, both in the humid montane forests of the Yungas of Cochabamba and in Santa Cruz. It differs from all congeners in having 10 dorsal scale rows at midbody, an entire cloacal plate, keeled paravertebral rows, lightly colored lower portions of the supralabials, a yellow snout, a short hemipenis, and lacking postocular stripes, proximal enlarged spines on the hemipenis, and apical pits. Adults and juveniles have an emerald green background color. The new species is recovered as the sister taxon of C. leucometapus, which is known from the Amazonian slopes of the Andes between central Peru and northern Ecuador. We also provide an identification key to the species of Chironius with 10 dorsal rows at midbody.
Read the paper here:
ARC_18_1-2_58-67_e333.pdf (amphibian-reptile-conservation.org)