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A homalopsid snake endemic to the Chao Phrya drainage in Thailand, from metropolitan Bangkok.
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A comparison of the lateral patterns of Enhydris chanardi (top) and Enhydris jagorii (bottom). Two species that have long been confused.
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Mae Tha, Lampang, Thailand
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The rainbow mud snake, Enhydris enhydris, is perhaps the most common aquatic snake in Southeast Asia. The species feeds on small fish and uses almost all bodies of shallow water, including rice paddies. This snake was photographed in southern Thailand at Lake Songhkla.
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Mae Tha, Lampang, Thailand
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Mae Tha, Lampang, Thailand
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The Long-tailed Mud Snake is a homalopsid endemic to Tonle Sap Cambodia, and a species involved in the snake harvest.
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The Long-tailed Mud Snake is endemic to Cambodia's Great Lake, Tonle Sap. It is involved in the Tonle Sap snake harvest and is cloesl;y related to Enhydris jagorii and E. innominata.
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Mekong mud snake, Enhydris subtaeniata, was long confused with Enhydris enhydris and E. jagorii. It is relatively widespread in the Mekong drainage and at some localities is almost as abundant as the rainbow mud snake, E. enhydris. Specimen from Khorat basin, Thailand
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Jagor's mud snake is a Thailand endemic, with only one known extant population. The species was long confused with Enhydris subtaeniata. It is closely related to E. longicauda and E. innominata.