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Tigger Spotted Necked Trough Snake: commonly known as "Pheasant Neck"!

Tiger spotted garter snake: commonly known as "pheasant neck"!

The tiger garter snake is known by different names in different areas, such as "pheasant neck", "pheasant collar", "cockatoo", etc. The snake is also known as the "pheasant neck". The pattern of the tiger snake is extremely rich and vivid, with several colors interspersed on its body. Unlike other snakes, it has a single color, which is why it is also called the "Northern Smurf". There are three subspecies of the tiger garter snake***, namely: the Chinese subspecies, the Taiwanese subspecies and the Japanese subspecies.

In most parts of China, you can see the tiger spotted gullet snake's figure, generally speaking, in the extremely cold Tibet, Heilongjiang region can rarely survive, but the tiger spotted gullet snake can be well adapted to the local extreme cold weather. It also has a wide range of habitats, and generally lives near water sources with lots of small vertebrates, such as rivers, lakes, and rice paddies, where it can feed on frogs, toads, and rodents.

The tiger grouper is a medium-sized snake, averaging only about 0.8 meters in length, although females are longer than males. In rural areas, it is a common occurrence to see the tiger-spotted necked snake, but people are not sure if it is a venomous snake or not.

On the one hand, the teeth of the tiger garter snake have little effect on human bites. Tigerspots are born without anterior sulcus teeth, only having larger teeth behind the alveolus, somewhat similar to posterior sulcus teeth, and there is no conduit connecting the venom glands to the fangs, which does not allow venom to flow to the fangs. Apart from being able to play a role in feeding on prey, it is hardly lethal to humans.

On the other hand, the tiger-spotted necked garter snake has a smaller amount of venom to excrete. Vipers of similar size to it are basically able to reach over 70-80 milligrams of detoxification, while its average detoxification is only 11.8 milligrams, which, coupled with its own defects, is why many people would think that it is not very toxic.

In addition to this, most of the Tiger Necked Trough Snakes are relatively docile, and are also less likely to actively attack people.