Round-spotted viper
The round-spotted viper is also known as the hundred-step leopard. As the name suggests, the snake has prominent round freckles on its body. This snake is mainly distributed in Southeast Asia and China. It is a venomous viper under the suborder Viperidae, Viperidae, and Mountain Viper.
The toxin of the round-spotted viper can cause symptoms like stroke in the poisoned person, so that the regulator can sometimes detect the danger immediately, thus delaying the treatment. The number of fatal bites of round-spotted vipers is currently the highest among snakes in Asia. The local Red Cross Society of Thailand has developed a serum specifically designed to deal with the toxin of the round-spotted viper, called "Rushi Viper Serum".
Chinese name: Round-spotted viper
Chinese nickname: Money leopard, Baibu Jian leopard, money spot, ancient money window
Two methods: Daboia russelii siamensis
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: < /strong> Chordata
Class: Creeping class
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Snakes Suborder
Family: Viperidae
>Species: Mountain Viper
Subspecies: Round-spotted Viper
Dispersed: Dispersed in the sea: Fujian (Zhao'an, Quanzhou, Hui'an, Xi'an, Nan'an), Taiwan (Hualien, Ruisui, Taitung, Kaohsiung, Hengchun, Shengli, Pingtung, Taipei), Guangdong (Shaoguan, Guangzhou), Guangxi (Nanning). Overseas dispersion: Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand
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